scholarly journals FLAMING CELLS DI MULTIPLE MYELOMA

Author(s):  
Nursin Abd. Kadir ◽  
Hj. Darmawaty E.R, ◽  
Mansyur Arif

Multiple myeloma is a type of cancer on plasma cells which are system of immune cells in bone marrow that produce antibodies. A47 years old man precented with an excruciatingly painfull bone lytic lesion acompanied with compressive fracture in his Thorakal XIIand first Lumbar vertebral body since a week ago. A complete blood count on admission showed anemia normocytic normocrom withhemoglobin content of 5.3 mg/dL. The blood smear revealed clumping of red blood cells to bound "Rouleaux formations". Serum proteinelectrophoresis showed specific evidence of a M-spike. Bence-Jones proteinuria was positive and serum kreatinin arised 2.44 mg/dL.The bone marrow aspiration contained 45% plasma cells, many of which exhibited the morphology of flaming cells with an eccentricnucleus and violaceous cytoplasm. Plasma cells varied in size and shape and included flaming cells and myeloma cells. The patient wasdiagnosed as having flaming cells in multiple myeloma stage IIIB.

Author(s):  
Annisa Ginar Indrarsi ◽  
Usi Sukorini

Multiple Myeloma (MM) is a hematological malignancy characterized by clonal plasma cell in bone marrow that produceabnormal globulin, which resulted in monoclonal gammopathy. Multiple Myeloma Non-Secretory (MMNS) is a very rareform of multiple myeloma with monoclonal plasmocytic proliferation in bone marrow supported by clinical manifestationand radiological findings. However, plasma cells fail to secrete immunoglobulin. A 44-year-old female came to SardjitoGeneral Hospital with main complaints of weakness and back pain. General weakness and pale palpebral conjunctiva were6 observed (+/+), liver and spleen were not palpable. Blood test results were as follows: Hb 3.0 g/dL, RBC 1.07 x 10 / μL, WBC3 3 562 x 10 /μL, PLT 114 x 10 /μL, A/G ratio 1.07, BUN 51.5 mg/dL, creatinine 4.62 mg/dL, and calcium 3.1 mmol/L. Skeletalsurvey suggested a multiple osteolytic. Protein electrophoresis revealed hypogammaglobulinemia with no M-spike. Therewere 66% of plasma cells in bone marrow. Patient was diagnosed by MMNS. Diagnosis MMNS can be established if clonalplasmacytes is accompanied with renal insufficiency and hypercalcemia. However, monoclonal gammopathy was not foundin serum protein electrophoresis. A case reported of 44-year-old female diagnosed as MMNS with 'punched out' multipleosteolytic, increased plasma cells in bone marrow without evidence of paraprotein in circulation proved by low A/G ratio andnegative M-spike.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2728-2728
Author(s):  
Vrushali s Dabak ◽  
Esther Urbaez Duran ◽  
Muath Dawod ◽  
Amr Hanbali

Abstract Introduction: Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) is defined as the presence of a serum monoclonal protein <3g/dl, with fewer than 10% plasma cells in bone marrow and absence of lytic bone lesions, anemia, hypercalcemia and renal insufficiency. Incidence increases with age, especially over 70 and its progression to malignant disease occurs at 1% per year. However, so far there are no studies which can reliably distinguish patients who would progress from those who would remain stable. Based on available literature, it is concluded that MGUS has low risk of progression when M-protein is less than 1.5 g/dl, with no reduction in polyclonal immunoglobulins and bone marrow plasma cells less than 5%. The recommended testing with suspected MGUS is hemoglobin concentration, protein studies, serum calcium, and creatinine. Metastatic bone survey (MBS) and bone marrow aspiration are felt unnecessary if M-protein is less than 1.5 g/dl. However literature to support the use of MBS at diagnosis based on the level of M-protein is limited. Also our observation has been that due to lack of clear guidelines, most physicians obtain a baseline MBS and some follow patients with yearly or every other year MBS irrespective of the level of M-protein. Hence, we decided to review patients diagnosed with MGUS at our institution to determine the importance of MBS and if possible identify risk factors like age, race, M-protein level, hemoglobin concentration, serum calcium or creatinine level, which would identify a subgroup of patients needing a MBS. In doing so we were hoping to separate out those patients in whom we could recommend against unnecessary use of the skeletal survey below a certain defined M protein level. Study: We reviewed charts on 1906 patients at Henry Ford hospital diagnosed with MGUS between 1990 and 2007. All patients with at least one M-protein and one MBS done were included in the analysis. We excluded patients with a level of M-protein >3.0 g/dl, who never had a skeletal survey in our system, had a light chain myeloma, plasmacytoma, chronic lymphocytic lymphoma(CLL), amyloidosis or protein evaluation done for diagnosis other than MGUS. We had 620 such patients. We collected data regarding their age, sex, ethnicity, date of diagnosis, type and level of the M-protein, hemoglobin level, serum calcium and creatinine at baseline, result of the MBS, date of progression to multiple myeloma (MM) if any and the date of last follow up if they did not progress to MM. Positive MBS is defined as x ray findings consistent with myelomatous changes with bone marrow aspiration confirming diagnosis of MM. Results: Of 620 patients, 36 had a positive MBS and applying non parametric Mann Whitney test and a chi-squared test, positive results seemed to correlate with higher level of M-protein, IgG subtype, lower hemoglobin and higher creatinine. Male sex and older age were other risk factors. Using the LOES curve to graph the risk of a positive skeletal event with the level of M-protein, risk was noted to increase significantly with M-protein in the range of 1.8– 3.0 (odds ratio 8.84 compared with 1.31 if level was less than 1.8), which was highly statistically significant as shown in figure 1. Further for 97/620 who progressed to multiple myeloma, the risk of progression was significantly higher for males, younger age at diagnosis of MGUS, lower hemoglobin, higher level of M-protein, IgG subtype and a positive skeletal event. Discussion: Our study is a retrospective chart review with its own limitations. However to our knowledge this is the first study to define the level of M-protein in patients with MGUS above which obtaining a MBS may be of value. Our study identifies 1.8 as a cut off value of M-protein below which doing routine MBS without symptoms of bone pains or other laboratory features suggesting progression to multiple myeloma might be unnecessary. Other risk factors for a positive event and progression to MM like lower hemoglobin, higher creatinine, older age, male sex and IgG subtype in our study are in keeping with what has been described in the literature. Conclusion: Based on our study, obtaining baseline MBS in all patients with suspected MGUS was not beneficial. Hence, we would not recommend obtaining MBS in patients with M-protein <1.8 g/dl in absence of other risk factors for progression to multiple myeloma. Figure 1: LOES curve showing increased likelihood of positive MBS for increasing MPEV level. Figure 1:. LOES curve showing increased likelihood of positive MBS for increasing MPEV level.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maciej R. Czerniuk ◽  
Artur Jurczyszyn ◽  
Grzegorz Charlinski

Multiple myeloma (myeloma multiplex (MM)) is a malignant non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma derived from B cell. Its essence is a malignant clone of plasma cells synthesizing growth of monoclonal immunoglobulin, which infiltrate the bone marrow, destroy the bone structure, and prevent the proper production of blood cells components. The paper presents a case of 62-year-old patient who developed symptoms in addition to neurological and haematological changes in the oral mucosa in the course of multiple myeloma. The treatment resulted in partial improvement. The authors wish to draw attention not only to nonspecificity and rarity of changes in the mouth which can meet the dentist but also to the complexity of the multidisciplinary therapy patients diagnosed with MM.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 3396-3396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Kyle ◽  
Ellen Remstein ◽  
Terry Therneau ◽  
Angela Dispenzieri ◽  
Paul Kurtin ◽  
...  

Abstract Smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM) is characterized by a serum M protein ≥ 3g/dL and/or 10% or more of plasma cells in the bone marrow. However, the definition is not standardized, and it is not known whether both serum M protein levels and bone marrow plasma cell counts are necessary for diagnosis or if one parameter is sufficient. We reviewed the medical records and bone marrows of all patients from Mayo Clinic seen within 30 days of recognition of an IgG or IgA M protein ≥ 3g/dL or a bone marrow containing ≥ 10% plasma cells from 1970 to 1995. This allows for a minimum potential follow-up of 10 years. Patients with end-organ damage at baseline from plasma cell proliferation, including active multiple myeloma (MM) and primary amyloidosis (AL) and those who had received chemotherapy were excluded. A differential of the bone marrow aspirate coupled with the bone marrow biopsy morphology and immunohistochemistry using antibodies directed against CD138, MUM-1 and Cyclin D1 were evaluated in every case in order to estimate the plasma cell content. In all, 301 patients fulfilled either of the criteria for SMM. Their median age was 64 years and only 3% were less than 40 years of age; 60% were male. The median hemoglobin value was 12.9 g/dL; 7% were less than 10 g/dL, but the anemia was unrelated to plasma cell proliferation. IgG accounted for 75%, IgA 22%, and biclonal proteins were found in 3%. The serum light-chain was κ in 67% and λ in 33%. The median serum M spike was 2.9 g/dL; 11% were at least 4.0 g/dL. Uninvolved serum immunoglobulins were reduced in 81%; only 1 immunoglobulin was reduced in 31% and both were decreased in 50%. The urine contained a monoclonal κ protein in 36% and λ in 18% and 46% were negative. The median size of the urine M spike was 0.04 g/24h; only 5 (3%) were > 1 g/24h. The median bone marrow plasma cell content was 15 – 19%; 10% had less than 10% plasma cells, while 10% had at least 50% plasma cells in the bone marrow. Cyclin D-1 was expressed in 17%. Patients were categorized into 3 groups: Group 1, serum M protein ≥ 3g/dL and bone marrow containing ≥ 10% plasma cells (n= 113, 38%); Group 2, bone marrow plasma cells ≥ 10% but serum M protein < 3g/dL (n= 158, 52%); Group 3, serum M protein ≥ 3g/dL but bone marrow plasma cells < 10% (n= 30, 10%). During 2,204 cumulative years of follow-up 85% died (median follow-up of those still living 10.8 years), 155 (51%) developed MM, while 7 (2%) developed AL. The overall rate of progression at 10 years was 62%; median time to progression was 5.5 yrs. The median time to progression was 2.4, 9.2, and 19 years in groups 1, 2, and 3 respectively; correspondingly at 10 years, progression occurred in 76%, 59%, and 32% respectively. Significant risk factors for progression with univariate analysis were serum M spike ≥ 4g/dL (p < 0.001), presence of IgA (p = 0.003), presence of urine light chain (p = 0.006), presence of λ urinary light chain (p = 0.002), bone marrow plasma cells ≥ 20% (p < 0.001) and reduction of uninvolved immunoglobulins (p < 0.001). The hemoglobin value, gender, serum albumin, and expression of cyclin D-1 were not of prognostic importance. On multivariate analysis, the percentage of bone marrow plasma cells was the only significant factor predicting progression to MM or AL.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 3152-3152
Author(s):  
H. Robert Bergen ◽  
David L Murray ◽  
Diane F. Jelinek ◽  
Renee C. Tschumper ◽  
David R Barnidge ◽  
...  

Abstract Proteomics with great sensitivity and specificity effectively analyzes proteins by prior tryptic digestion and subsequent analysis by LC-MS/MS of the tryptic digest. We have utilized this approach in the development of a LC-MS/MS method to characterize minimum residual disease in multiple myeloma. The abundant antibodies produced by multiple myeloma plasma cells are identical and appear as a spike (M-spike) upon protein electrophoresis. The M-spike and histological examination of the bone marrow constitute part of the myeloma diagnostic repertoire. Upon treatment, myeloma cells and the antibodies they produce are reduced in number and amount and become increasingly hard to detect. The bone marrow biopsy serves as the “gold standard” test for clinical remission. We have developed a sensitive test for the presence of the monoclonal antibody produced by the plasma cells which may serve as a substitute for invasive bone marrow biopsy. We have focused on tryptic peptides comprising the variable CDR regions of the Ig light chains that are unique to each patients antibody clone. Utilizing 2-5 µL of patient plasma/serum from the initial M-spike sample we have utilized SDS-PAGE to yield a crudely purified immunoglobulin light chain. The light chain band is isolated, reduced, alkylated and trypsin digested with subsequent LC-MS/MS analysis to identify CDR specific tryptic peptide(s). These can be identified as variable peaks (elution time and mass) in a base peak ion chromatogram where constant region peptides of either lambda or kappa light chains (clone dependent) serve as “internal standards” for identifying the CDR tryptic peptides. The peptide’s mass and its corresponding MS/MS spectra are unique to this CDR tryptic peptide and this patient’s clone. The unique diagnostic peptide is isolated in subsequent samples by immunoaffinity purification of the target kappa/lambda clone, SDS-PAGE separation and LC-MS/MS analysis of the light chain gel band. An extracted ion chromatogram is generated based upon the CDR peptides identified in the initial analysis of the M-spike sample. In patients in clinical remission the presence of a significant signal from the targeted peptides indicates that targeting a CDR peptide from the M-spike protein is more sensitive than currently available diagnostic tools including immunofixation. Comparison of this test to the gold standard bone marrow biopsy will be examined. Disclosures: Barnidge: Mayo Foundation: provisional patent application for technology, provisional patent application for technology Patents & Royalties.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 219-224
Author(s):  
Ali Eser

Objective: Flow cytometry (FC) is a diagnostic method supporting traditional morphological examination in disease follow-up and the diagnosis of Multiple myeloma (MM). Normal and atypical plasma cells (PCs) can be told apart from each other by means of FC method. The plasma cell rate is the highest in the blood obtained in the first aspirate during bone marrow aspiration in MM. Material and methods: A total of 60 patients that have been diagnosed with MM between 2018 and 2020, including 30 patients whom flow cytometry was studied with the first aspirate during bone marrow aspiration, and 30 patients whom FC was studied with the second aspirate were included in our study. The characteristics of the patients were analyzed retrospectively from their files. Results: The median ratio of plasma cells (PCs) detected by FC and bone marrow biopsy  was 17,5% and 44%, respectively. While this rate was median 37,5% in patients that flow cytometric study was performed with the first aspirate, the rate was found to be median 7% in patients that FC was performed with the second sample. The PCs rates were statistically significantly higher with the flow cytometric study with the first aspirate than the second one (p=0.000). Conclusion: Flow cytometric study with the first aspirate during bone marrow aspiration in patients with MM is diagnostically important.  


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3136-3136
Author(s):  
Eric Robert Fedyk ◽  
Neeraja Idamakanti ◽  
Jia Chen ◽  
Jose Estevam ◽  
Vivian Hernandez ◽  
...  

Introduction: The CD38 antigen is a target for treating multiple myeloma and is being investigated for disorders caused by plasma cells. Therapeutics bind to CD38 on red blood cells and platelets in the vasculature, prior to myeloma and plasma cells in the bone marrow and this initial activity could compromise downstream binding to target cells. Methods: We hypothesized that selectively targeting myeloma and plasma cells by circumventing CD38 expressed on RBCs and platelets could improve the potency of next generation therapeutics. We selected the human antibody TAK-079 (IgG1) because it demonstrated relatively low binding to CD38 on RBCs and platelets, in comparison to the first-generation antibody daratumumab (IgG1) in vitro, and characterized the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM) patients (NCT03439280). Results: TAK-079 and daratumumab bind to distinct amino acids of CD38 and exhibit similar affinities to recombinant CD38 protein, immobilized on a silicon chip (e.g. KD of 0.45 & 0.69 nM, respectively) and to endogenously expressed CD38 on a clonal cell line (e.g. EC50s = 0.30 & 0.34 nM, respectively). In contrast, these antibodies bound differently to components of human blood. Daratumumab bound 610% more intensively to a subpopulation of RBCs than TAK-079. Similarly, daratumumab bound 622% more intensively to a subpopulation of platelets than TAK-079. Conversely, TAK-079 bound 181% more potently than daratumumab to CD38 expressed on blood B lymphocytes (e.g. MFI mean EC50 =3.6 & 6.6 nM, respectively) and 259% more potently to blood T lymphocytes (e.g. MFI mean EC50 = 9.3 & 24.2 nM, respectively). Consistent with these data, trough exposures of TAK-079 were approximately 200% higher than those reported for daratumumab (NCT02519452) in RRMM patients, when compared at equivalent subcutaneous doses. Furthermore, bone marrow myeloma and plasma cells were completely saturated by TAK-079 and reduced at subcutaneous doses ≥ 300mg administered weekly. Conclusion: An effective strategy for developing more potent therapeutics may be to circumvent binding to CD38 on circulating RBCs and PLTs because the magnitude of CD38 antibody binding to leukocytes is inversely related to binding of circulating RBCs and PLTs in vitro. In addition, lower binding to RBCs and PLTs is associated with higher availability of CD38 antibody for binding target cells in RRMM patients, as well as target saturation and depletion by TAK-079 when administered subcutaneously at relatively low doses (eg, 300mg). Disclosures Fedyk: Millennium, a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Ltd: Employment, Patents & Royalties. Idamakanti:Takeda: Employment. Chen:Takeda: Employment. Estevam:Takeda: Employment. Hernandez:Takeda: Employment. Wagoner:Takeda: Employment. Carsillo:Takeda: Employment. Berg:Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Ltd: Employment, Patents & Royalties. Allikmets:Takeda: Employment, Patents & Royalties. Lahu:Think AQ: Consultancy. Palumbo:Millennium, a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Ltd: Employment, Patents & Royalties.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 5328-5328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Wang ◽  
Shuang Geng ◽  
Yuping Zhong ◽  
Mingyi Chen ◽  
Wenming Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective: To detect the circulating plasma cells (cPCs) in patients of multiple myeloma (MM) with or withoutextramedullary plasmacytoma (EMP). Methods: The 21 patients of MM samples were collected from April 2014 to April 2015. There were 12 males, 9 females, with a median age of 60 (49 to 76 years old). Peripheral blood and bone marrow were examined before treatment or after EMP. Multi parameter flow cytometry (MFC) was used to analyze abnormal plasma cells (tumor cells) in samples of bone marrow and CD138 MACS positive sorting peripheral blood. The antibodies used in the flow cytometry were CD38-APC, CD138-PE, CD81-PE-Cy7, CD45-PacBlue, CD19-Percp-Cy5.5, CD56-mCherry-PE-ef610, CD117-AmCyan, CD16, Zombie-APC-Cy7. Results: In these 21 patients, he ratio of sex is 1.33:1, the median age is 60 (49-76). The immunoglobin type is as follows: IgG κ 7 cases, IgG λ 5 cases, IgG 2 cases, IgA κ 3 cases, IgA λ 2 cases, λ light chain 1 cases. The morphology of bone marrow aspiration showed more than 15% plasma cells and abnormal plasma cells can be seen in bone marrow in cytometry. 9 of 21 patients diagnosed MM with EMP, 2 of them find EMP when initial diagnosis and 7 of them find EMP in the course of disease (6 months to 8 years). The sites of the EMP included head, jaw, chest wall, side of the rib, the soft tissue of the sacral region and the vertebral body and all patients had bone involvement. In 17 patients with complete clinical data, bone marrow and peripheral blood specimens, the cPCs negative rate was 87.5%(7/8) in EMP negative patients, while the cPCs positive rate was 66.7% (6/9) in EMP positive patients, the difference among groups was statistically significant (chi square values: 5.13, p = 0.024). Conclusion: MFC has been widely used in diagnosis and minimal residual disease surveillance of MM, here we established the detection method of cPCs in MM patients, and it is valuable for clinical diagnosis and prognosis judgment. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e19540-e19540
Author(s):  
Eugene McPherson ◽  
Ervido Mejia ◽  
Philippe Tassy

e19540 Background: Multiple myeloma is a B-cell malignancy involving germinal center B cells characterized by urinary monoclonal proteins, osteolytic bone lesions and infiltration of bone marrow with plasma cells and pathology involving aberrant chromosomal translocation with increased glucose uptake as glucose transporter (GLUT-4), AKT kinase activation, overexpressed proinflammatory cytokines produced by bone marrow stromal cells (BMSC) in smoldering multiple myeloma and multiple myeloma, These biomarkers are antiapoptotic and control growth, prognosis and survival. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) are major growth factors in MM. IGF-1 binds to IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1R) as a strong prognostic indicator. Dysregulation and modulation of IGF-1, proinflammatory cytokines, AKT kinase and IL-6 in HIVSMM patients with RTV-based HAART and selenomethionine (Se-Met) adjuvant therapy may suppress NF-kb and abrogate GLUT-4 HIVSMM progression. Methods: We evaluated several HIVSMM patient's biomarkers over four years: CD4, HIVRNA, beta-2-microglobulin, LDH, soluble interleukin -2 receptor (sIL-2R), CRP, SFLC ratio, selenium, bone survey, and bone marrow aspiration/biopsy. Results: CD4 increased to 456/cumm from < 80/cumm, HIVRNA was undetectable from > 1 million copies/ml, beta-2-microglobulin 2.24 mg/L from 14.40 mg/L, LDH 155 IU/L from 432IU/L, sIL-2R 75 pg/ml from 45,752 pg/ml, CRP 1.49 mg/L from 87.4 mg/L, SFLC ratio 0.93 from >2.08, selenium kept >140 mcg/L (high normal level), bone survey negative X 2, and bone marrow aspiration/biopsy plasmacytosis with plasma cells < 5% from > 10% and CD 138 positivity. Conclusions: Dysregulation and modulation of HIVSMM biomarkers with adjuvant Se-Met and RTV-based HAART may suppress AKT kinase and NF-kb activation preventing HIVSMM progression to HIVMM via IGF-1 recruitment of GLUT-4. Overall improved prognosis and survival may be extrapolated to non-HIVSMM patients with concommitant immunomodulary therapy.


2002 ◽  
Vol 126 (3) ◽  
pp. 365-368
Author(s):  
Filiz Şen ◽  
Karen P. Mann ◽  
L. Jeffrey Medeiros

Abstract The association of sarcoidosis with Hodgkin disease and non-Hodgkin lymphoma is well known. However, multiple myeloma also can occur rarely in association with sarcoidosis. We describe a patient with sarcoidosis who subsequently developed multiple myeloma. The patient was a 49-year-old woman with a 4-year history of severe, chronic, active sarcoidosis involving her lungs, lymph nodes, eyes, and bone marrow. During the initial clinical workup, a serum monoclonal paraprotein was detected and bone marrow examination revealed a slight increase in plasma cells (4%), in addition to noncaseating granulomas. Thus, the diagnoses of monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance and sarcoidosis were established simultaneously. She sought medical attention for her current illness when she developed low back pain and weakness of her lower extremities. Serum protein electrophoresis and immunofixation revealed a monoclonal paraprotein, immunoglobulin (Ig) G κ type, and quantification revealed an IgG level of 46.67 g/L (normal, 5.88–15.73 g/L). Bone marrow aspiration and biopsy revealed multiple myeloma and sarcoidosis. Including this patient, 11 cases of sarcoidosis and multiple myeloma have been reported to date, including 3 patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance preceding the onset of multiple myeloma. In this case, as in most of the cases reported previously, sarcoidosis preceded the development of multiple myeloma.


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