Predictive value of baseline serum MIP-1 and CRP on symptom burden and tumor response to induction therapy in patients with multiple myeloma. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • 8091 Background: Macrophage inflammatory protein-1(MIP-1) is a growth factor for human multiple myeloma (MM) cells. As an osteoclastic factor, its presence provides pathophysiological evidence of the development of lytic bone lesions in MM. C-reactive protein (CRP) indicates systemic inflammation. The relationship between disease-driven inflammatory markers and both patient-experienced symptoms and tumor response to induction therapy is unknown. Methods: MM patients (N=39) who were either newly diagnosed or had received fewer than 2 cycles of chemotherapy, and who also were to receive induction therapy, were enrolled. To test concentrations of MIP-1 and CRP, serum samples were collected before and after induction and assayed by Luminex. Multiple symptoms were measured twice a week via the M. D. Anderson Symptom Inventory MM module (MDASI-MM) from -8 to +112 days of induction. The MM-specific items of the MDASI-MM are bone aches, constipation, muscle weakness, diarrhea, sore mouth or throat, rash, and difficulty paying attention. Correlation between symptom severity and inflammatory markers at baseline was examined by linear regression modeling. Kruskal-Wallis significance test and Wilcoxon test were used to examine association between MIP-1 and tumor response. Results: Patients received either bortezomib-based (89%) or lenalidomide-based induction therapy. Baseline MIP-1 and CRP were significantly inversely related to the mean severity component score of the 5 most-severe symptoms (fatigue, pain, bone aches, poor sleep, drowsiness) (p=.03; p=.02), and significantly inversely related to the severity of a component score of the module-specific symptoms (p=0.04; p=.002). Change over time in MIP-1 differed significantly by tumor response category (p=.04), with the partial response group having a higher median score than the complete response group (1.483 vs. 0.016, p=.01). Conclusions: Our data suggest that higher baseline levels of serum MIP-1 and CRP predict effective chemotherapy-induced reduction of disease-related symptoms in MM patients. Higher serum MIP-1 expression after induction therapy was related to less-ideal tumor response.

published proceedings

  • Journal of Clinical Oncology

author list (cited authors)

  • Cleeland, C. S., Wang, X. S., Thomas, S. K., Liu, P., Sailors, M. H., Mendoza, T. R., ... Johnson, V. E.

citation count

  • 1

complete list of authors

  • Cleeland, Charles S||Wang, Xin Shelley||Thomas, Sheeba K||Liu, Ping||Sailors, Mary H||Mendoza, Tito R||Reuben, James M||Cohen, Evan N||Gilmore, Katherine R||Ilagan, Venus M||Williams, Loretta A||Johnson, Valen E

publication date

  • May 2012