Objective: Evaluate the overall survival (OS) of patients with multiple myeloma (MM) at different treatment stages in France.
Methods: This retrospective observational cohort study used data from the French National Health Insurance database to study patients with MM (diagnosis 2013-2019). Patient outcomes included OS (all-cause mortality), time-to-next treatment (TTNT), and duration of therapy (DoT) from initial diagnosis, the start of different lines of therapy (LOTs), triple-class exposure (TCE), and subsequent treatment following TCE. The Kaplan-Meier method analyzed "time-to-event" data.
Results: From diagnosis, death rates increased from 1% at 1 month to 24% at 2 years; median OS was 63.8 months (N = 14 309). Median OS from the start of LOTs declined from 61.0 months (LOT1) to 14.8 months (LOT4). Median OS from TCE start was 14.7 months. There was a large variation in TTNT within LOTs (e.g., LOT1: bortezomib + lenalidomide: TTNT = 26.4 months, OS = 61.7 months; lenalidomide: TTNT = 20.0 months, OS = 39.6 months); DoT was similar for LOT1 and LOT2, then progressively declined at LOT4. Patients with stem cell transplant, younger age, and less comorbidity had better survival outcomes.
Conclusions: Patients with MM face a poor prognosis after relapse to multiple LOTs and TCE, demonstrating a worsening of survival outcomes. Access to novel therapies may improve outcomes.
Keywords: France; line of therapy; multiple myeloma; overall survival; real world; refractory; retrospective; triple-class exposed.
© 2023 GSK and The Authors. European Journal of Haematology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.