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Multiple myeloma is difficult to treat with only anti-cancer medicine (called chemotherapy) or radiation alone. Sometimes higher doses of chemotherapy are used but when used can also lower blood counts. Using own cells (special cells called stem cells) to help increase the blood counts after high doses of chemotherapy is called autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT).
Using own stem cells to restore blood counts and other advances in supportive measures (antibiotics and growth factors that increase blood counts) has improved the safety of ASCT. However, blood counts still decrease for a period of days after high doses of chemotherapy. During that time, patients are at greater risk for infections. Studies have shown that the faster the blood counts recover after ASCT, the less at risk there is for developing unwanted side effects after ASCT.
Typically during an ASCT, a patient's stem cells are given back to them all at once on a single day. In this study, the investigators plan to see what happens when smaller amounts of own stem cells are given back to the patient over multiple days. The investigators want to find out what effects good and/or bad this will have on the patient and there multiple myeloma. Some studies have shown that giving back stem cells over a period of days helps to increase bone marrow activity and decrease the time it takes for blood counts to recover after ASCT. It is our hope that this new approach may lower a patient's risk of side effects and infections, decrease the number of blood transfusions that a patient needs during this process, reduce the time a patient has to spend in the hospital, and lower overall treatment costs.
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Inclusion criteria
Age ≥18 and < than or = to 75
Histologic and serologic findings, reviewed at MSKCC, confirming the diagnosis of multiple myeloma. Standard diagnostic criteria for multiple myeloma will be used, as per the International Myeloma Foundation consensus guidelines (Durie et al, 2003) .
Patients must have symptomatic multiple myeloma who have responded to prior induction or salvage chemotherapy (i.e. chemosensitive disease):
Patients who are receiving high-dose melphalan and ASCT as part of their initial therapy require at least minor response to their last line of therapy to document chemosensitive disease (Anderson et al. 2008)
Patients who are receiving high-dose melphalan and ASCT as part of salvage therapy require at least a minor response to their last line of therapy to document chemosensitive disease (Anderson et al. 2008).
There is no limit on the number of prior regimens received by the patient.
Serum bilirubin ≤ 2.0 mg/dl
AST, ALT and alkaline phosphatase < 3 times the upper limit of laboratory normal
Creatinine clearance > or = to 40 ml/min (24 hour urine collection or calculated*)
*To be calculated by the Cockroft-Gault method: (140-Age) x Mass (kg) x [0.85 if female] (72 x Creatinine (mg/dL)
LVEF > or = to 45% by MUGA or rest ECHO
Diffusing capacity > or = to 45% (adjusted for hemoglobin) predicted by pulmonary function testing
Performance status KPS > or = to 70%.
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26 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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