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Review
. 2017 Sep 1;3(9):1257-1265.
doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2016.5763.

Diagnosis and Management of Waldenström Macroglobulinemia: Mayo Stratification of Macroglobulinemia and Risk-Adapted Therapy (mSMART) Guidelines 2016

Affiliations
Review

Diagnosis and Management of Waldenström Macroglobulinemia: Mayo Stratification of Macroglobulinemia and Risk-Adapted Therapy (mSMART) Guidelines 2016

Prashant Kapoor et al. JAMA Oncol. .

Abstract

Importance: Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM), an IgM-associated lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma, has witnessed several practice-altering advances in recent years. With availability of a wider array of therapies, the management strategies have become increasingly complex. Our multidisciplinary team appraised studies published or presented up to December 2015 to provide consensus recommendations for a risk-adapted approach to WM, using a grading system.

Observations: Waldenström macroglobulinemia remains a rare, incurable cancer, with a heterogeneous disease course. The major classes of effective agents in WM include monoclonal antibodies, alkylating agents, purine analogs, proteasome inhibitors, immunomodulatory drugs, and mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors. However, the highest-quality evidence from rigorously conducted randomized clinical trials remains scant.

Conclusions and relevance: Recognizing the paucity of data, we advocate participation in clinical trials, if available, at every stage of WM. Specific indications exist for initiation of therapy. Outside clinical trials, based on the synthesis of available evidence, we recommend bendamustine-rituximab as primary therapy for bulky disease, profound hematologic compromise, or constitutional symptoms attributable to WM. Dexamethasone-rituximab-cyclophosphamide is an alternative, particularly for nonbulky WM. Routine rituximab maintenance should be avoided. Plasma exchange should be promptly initiated before cytoreduction for hyperviscosity-related symptoms. Stem cell harvest for future use may be considered in first remission for patients 70 years or younger who are potential candidates for autologous stem cell transplantation. At relapse, retreatment with the original therapy is reasonable in patients with prior durable responses (time to next therapy ≥3 years) and good tolerability to previous regimen. Ibrutinib is efficacious in patients with relapsed or refractory disease harboring MYD88 L265P mutation. In the absence of neuropathy, a bortezomib-rituximab-based option is reasonable for relapsed or refractory disease. In select patients with chemosensitive disease, autologous stem cell transplantation should be considered at first or second relapse. Everolimus and purine analogs are suitable options for refractory or multiply relapsed WM. Our recommendations are periodically updated as new, clinically relevant information emerges.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Kapoor has received research funding from Takeda (Institution), Onyx (Institution), and Celgene (Institution), and consulting fees from Celgene and Sanofi (Institution). Dr Ansell has received research funding from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celldex, Merck, Affimed, and Seattle Genetics. Dr Fonseca has received consulting fees from Celgene, Genzyme, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Bayer, Lilly, Onyx, Binding Site, Novartis, Sanofi, Millennium, and Amgen; has research funding from Onyx; and is a member of the scientific advisory board of Applied Biosciences. Dr Kumar has received honoraria from Skyline Diagnostics. Research support from Abbvie, Celgene, Novartis, Amgen, Takeda, Sanofi, and Janssen has been provided to Institution for conduct of clinical trials on which Dr Kumar serves as a principal investigator. Dr Mikhael has received research support from Celgene, Onyx, Abbvie, and Sanofi. Dr Witzig reports receiving research funding from Celgene (Institution), Novartis (Institution), Spectrum Pharmaceuticals (Institution), and Acerta Pharma (Institution). Dr Mauermann has received research support from Alnylam and Ionis pharmaceuticals, and honoraria from Ionis. Dr Dispenzieri has received research support from Celgene, Millenium, Pfizer, Jannsen, and Alnylam. Dr Ailawadhi has served as a consultant for Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Amgen Pharmaceuticals, Pharmacyclics, Inc, and Takeda, and has received research funding from Pharmacyclics, Inc. Dr Stewart has received research support from Celgene and Takeda and consulting fees from Novartis and Takeda. Dr Lacy receives research funding from Celgene. Dr Dingli has received research funding from Takeda, Karyopharm, and Amgen. Dr Grogan has received research support from Pfizer and consulting fees from Prothena. Dr Bergsagel has received research support from Novartis and Constellation Pharmaceuticals and consultant fees from Amgen, Janssen, Sanofi- Aventis, Mundipharma, and Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr Lin receives research funding from Janssen. Dr Gertz has received research support from Ionis Pharmaceuticals and Prothena and honoraria from Celgene, Millennium Pharmaceuticals, and Novartis. Dr Reeder has received research support from Celgene, Novartis, and Millennium. No other disclosures are reported.

Figures

Figure
Figure. Consensus for Waldenström Macroglobulinemia (WM)
BDR indicates bortezomib (weekly) + dexamethasone + rituximab; BR, bendamustine + rituximab; DRC, dexamethasone-rituximab-cyclophosphamide; MGUS, monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. To convert hemoglobin from grams per deciliter to grams per liter, multiply by 10; to convert platelet count from thousands per microliter to billions per liter, multiply by 1.0. aSix cycles of DRC is an alternative if the disease burden is low. bIf not previously used.

Comment in

References

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