While survival among multiple myeloma (MM) patients has been improving over time, the development of secondary primary malignancies (SPMs) seems to offset this effect by increasing the risk of mortality, a recent study has found.
Drawing from the Netherlands Cancer Registry, the researchers assessed 18,030 adult MM patients, of whom 8.3 percent (n=1,489) had a prior malignancy diagnosis (PMD) while 7.4 percent (n=1,334) developed an SPM. Benign and in situ tumours were excluded, as were basal cell carcinomas and patients who were diagnosed with MM at autopsy.
Multivariable competing-risk regression analysis found no significant link between PMD and SPM (subdistribution hazard ratio [SHR], 0.97, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.79–1.18; p=0.73). The same remained true when PMDs were treated with systemic or radiotherapy (SHR, 0.94, 95 percent CI, 0.69–1.28; p=0.70) or were not treated (SHR, 0.98, 95 percent CI, 0.76–1.27; p=0.89).
In contrast, age was a significant correlate of SPMs. Compared to patients aged 18–65 years, the risk of SPM was significantly elevated in those aged 66–70 years (SHR, 1.19, 95 percent CI, 1.01–1.40; p=0.04), but significantly suppressed in those aged >70 years (SHR, 0.84, 95 percent CI, 0.75–0.95; p<0.01). Such a pattern suggests that beyond a certain age, patients are more likely to die first before developing an SPM.
Of note, patients who had had a PMD, whether or not it was treated via systemic or radiotherapy, saw higher mortality risk than patients without a PMD. Similarly, the development of SPM aggravated death risk independently of other potential correlates.