Clinical Implications of Real-World Outpatient/Hybrid Patient Management
October 15th 2025Experts discuss the significant advancement of outpatient and hybrid dosing strategies for bispecific antibodies such as teclistamab in multiple myeloma, highlighting that with careful patient selection, multidisciplinary support, and proactive monitoring, these approaches maintain efficacy and safety comparable to inpatient care while enhancing patient convenience and expanding access.
Real-World Data From IMS: Outpatient/Hybrid Step-Up Dosing in Relapsed/Refractory Multiple Myeloma
October 15th 2025Experts discuss new real-world data supporting the safety and effectiveness of outpatient and hybrid step-up dosing of teclistamab in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, showing strong response rates, durable disease control, and manageable toxicity and reinforcing the feasibility of administering bispecific therapies beyond inpatient settings and expanding access in community care.
Real-World Data From IMS: Promising Results in Relapsed/Refractory Multiple Myeloma
October 15th 2025Experts discuss real-world data showing that teclistamab delivers efficacy and safety outcomes comparable to findings from clinical trials in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma—including older individuals at high risk—while highlighting the emerging role of shared care models to manage step-up dosing and expand access across community oncology settings.
Discussing Current Gaps in Multiple Myeloma Care
September 30th 2025Experts discuss the transformative impact of T-cell –redirecting therapies in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, while highlighting ongoing challenges in optimizing treatment sequencing, managing toxicities, and expanding access—particularly in community settings—to ensure patients can safely and effectively benefit from these novel options.
Introductions and an Overview of Multiple Myeloma Treatments
September 30th 2025In relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, treatment becomes increasingly challenging as patients progress through multiple lines of therapy. With each relapse, response rates diminish and the duration of remission shortens. Although there are several approved drug classes available—including immunomodulatory agents, proteasome inhibitors, and monoclonal antibodies—treatment sequencing is complex and individualized. Many patients become have triple-class– exposed or even penta-refractory disease, limiting the effectiveness of standard options and highlighting the need for innovative therapies and optimized care strategies. The real-world use of these therapies is often complicated by cumulative toxicities and logistical barriers. For example, immune-based therapies such as bispecific antibodies and CAR -T cells offer promising efficacy but can require hospitalization, intensive monitoring, and specialized infrastructure. In addition, therapies like such as bispecific antibodies may necessitate step-up dosing protocols to mitigate risks such as cytokine release syndrome. These factors can impact affect access and adherence, especially in community settings where supportive care resources may be limited. As data from ongoing studies and real-world registries accumulate, it becomes increasingly important to close gaps in care for patients with advanced disease. Incorporating novel agents earlier in treatment, managing toxicities more effectively, and improving access to cellular therapies are key goals. Continued collaboration between academic and community providers will be essential to ensure that the growing arsenal of myeloma therapies translates into improved outcomes across all practice settings.
PERSEUS Trial: Progression-Free Survival
July 14th 2025Panelists discuss recent data showing that sustained minimal residual disease (MRD) negativity strongly predicts long-term progression-free survival (PFS) in multiple myeloma, regardless of whether patients receive a 4-drug daratumumab-based regimen or standard-drug therapy, emphasizing MRD negativity as a key surrogate end point; they also highlight challenges in predicting who benefits most from intensive therapy and the importance of individualized dosing strategies to balance efficacy and tolerability across different patient populations.
PERSEUS Trial: Design/Baseline Characteristics
July 7th 2025Panelists discuss the Perseus study, which compared daratumumab-based quadruplet therapy (Dara-VRD) with VRD alone in patients with newly diagnosed, transplant-eligible multiple myeloma, highlighting its focus on a generally fit population and demonstrating improved progression-free survival and deeper responses with the 4-drug regimen, while noting some limitations in applicability to patients with significant comorbidities.
Treatment Overview of Transplant-Eligible Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma
June 30th 2025Panelists discuss the adoption of 4-drug regimens—including a CD38 monoclonal antibody—as the standard frontline therapy for patients with transplant-eligible multiple myeloma, emphasizing tailored modifications based on age and frailty, and evolving maintenance strategies that incorporate daratumumab to deepen and sustain responses post-transplant.
CEPHEUS Trial: Efficacy in Transplant-Ineligible Patients
June 23rd 2025Panelists discuss updated American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) data showing that 4-drug regimens significantly improve outcomes even in patients with transplant-ineligible multiple myeloma, with real-world dose modifications enabling broader use while maintaining efficacy and tolerability.
CEPHEUS Trial: Design/Baseline Characteristics
June 16th 2025Panelists discuss how recent data support the use of quadruplet regimens—including anti-CD38 antibodies—even in older or moderately frail patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma, shifting treatment decisions from transplant eligibility to functional status and depth of response.
Introduction/Treatment Overview of Transplant-Ineligible Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma
June 16th 2025Panelists discuss how subcutaneous anti-CD38 monoclonal antibodies are reshaping frontline multiple myeloma treatment by improving efficacy, tolerability, and patient convenience across both transplant-eligible and ineligible populations.
The Role of MRD Testing in Guiding Treatment in R/R MM: ASCO 2024 Updates from PERSEUS
July 19th 2024Following ASCO 2024, Samer Al'Hadidi, MD, discusses recent updates from the PERSEUS trial evaluating the role of testing for minimal residual disease (MRD) in guiding treatment for relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma.