Soluble B-cell maturation antigen levels for disease monitoring in oligosecretory and nonsecretory relapsed multiple myeloma
- PMID: 39441915
- DOI: 10.1182/blood.2024026028
Soluble B-cell maturation antigen levels for disease monitoring in oligosecretory and nonsecretory relapsed multiple myeloma
Abstract
Soluble B-cell maturation antigen (sBCMA) is elevated on multiple myeloma (MM) cells. We investigated whether sBCMA levels correlated with other myeloma tumor volume indicators and its utility in monitoring oligosecretory/nonsecretory (O-S/Non-S) MM. In 115 patients with newly diagnosed MM, sBCMA was compared with M-protein levels, bone marrow plasma cells (BMPCs), circulating tumor cells (CTCs), and total diffusion volume (tDV; estimated by whole-body diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging) at diagnosis. sBCMA levels increased significantly with International Staging System stage, chromosome 1q21 gain/amplification, and CTC levels. sBCMA also correlated strongly with %BMPC (r = 0.65) and moderately with tDV (r = 0.55) and paraprotein levels (involved immunoglobulin in IgG and IgA subtypes, r = 0.44 and 0.4; involved free light-chain levels in light-chain-only MM, r = 0.61, all P < .05). Longitudinal changes in sBCMA were consistent with disease status in both 17 O-S/Non-S and other secretory MM cases. Furthermore, sBCMA levels increased as early as 6 months prerelapse in almost all O-S/Non-S relapsed patients. Thus, sBCMA correlates strongly with total tumor volume in MM, as assessed using different modalities. We suggest that sBCMA is useful, not only for monitoring responses in patients with O-S/Non-S MM but also for early relapse detection and prediction.
© 2025 American Society of Hematology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: K.M. received research funding from AstraZeneca for an unrelated project. The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.
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