Identifying Candidates for Effective Utilization of Stored Autologous PBSCs in Salvage Transplantation for Multiple Myeloma: Who Benefits Most?
Amany R. Keruakous, Laura Walker, Molly Denlinger, Mohammad A. H. Mian, Danielle Bradshaw, Vamsi K. Kota, Anand P. Jillella

TL;DR
This study explores whether stored stem cells should be collected for older multiple myeloma patients, aiming to reduce costs and improve resource use.
Contribution
The study identifies cost-effective strategies for PBSC collection and utilization in elderly multiple myeloma patients.
Findings
Only 7% of patients in the study underwent salvage ASCT, with most recipients being ≤61 years old at initial ASCT.
Shifting to single-transplant PBSC collections for elderly patients could reduce costs and resource requirements.
Excess PBSC disposal or repurposing on collection day is recommended to avoid storage costs.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: High-dose chemotherapy (HD-CHT) followed by autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) remains the gold standard for eligible multiple myeloma (MM) patients, even amidst evolving therapeutic options. Clinical trials have demonstrated ASCT’s efficacy in MM, including its potential as salvage therapy after prolonged remission. Peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) are now the primary source of hematopoietic stem cells for ASCT. Collecting additional PBSCs post-initial myeloablative conditioning is challenging, leading many centers to adopt the practice of collecting and storing excess PBSCs during initial therapy to support tandem transplants or salvage treatments. The use of salvage ASCT may diminish in the face of novel, highly effective treatments like bispecific antibodies and cellular therapies for relapsed/refractory MM (RRMM). Despite available stored PBSC…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Myeloma Research and Treatments · Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation · Liver physiology and pathology
