0416 - Plasma Cell Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What is M protein in the context of plasma cell disorders?

A

A monoclonal antibody (gammopathy) which is secreted by neoplastic plasma cells, as in multiple myeloma. IgG is the most common M protein.

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2
Q

What is the pathophysiology of multiple myeloma?

A

An initial genomic change (often deletion of 13, or translocations at 14q32) leads to a monoclonal antibody of unknown significance.

When this is coupled with microenvironvironment changes in bone marrow (increased bone resorption and angiogenesis), and further genomic changes (N-RAS, K-RAS, p16 methylation), myeloma develops.

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3
Q

What are the key clinical features of myeloma?

A

M-protein (may be incidental)

CRAB end-organ damage - Hypercalcaemia, renal dysfunction, anaemia, bone disease

Bone marrow suppressions

Recurrent infections.

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4
Q

What key investigations would you perform on a patient suspected of myeloma? What results?

A

Serum M-protein, either by electrophoresis or serum Ig’s or FLCs - May have high Gamma or other protein or FLC - show elevated Kappa or Lambda B

lood Smear - Rouleaux and peripheral plasma cells

Bone Marrow Biopsy - Enlarged and excessive plasmablasts.

Serum/Urine protein would be elevated.

FBC, UEC - High lymphocytes, otherwise may have pancytopenia, poor

UEC (high calcium, low GFR)

Skull Xray - Osteolytic lesions.

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5
Q

What key investigations would you perform on a known Myeloma?

A

Bloods - FBC, UEC, Corr Cal (osteoclastic activity, kidney damage, bone marrow suppression)

Beta2 Microglobulin - for prognosis

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6
Q

How can myeloma be distinguished from MGUS (Monoclonal Gammopathy of Unknown Significance)?

A

Serum or Urine M-protein - Myeloma = >20g/L, MGUS =<30gL (generally <10)

Bone Marrow Plasma cells - Myeloma = high, MGUS = <10%

End organ damage - Myeloma = Present, MGUS absent

Evidence of Lymphoma - Myeloma = may be present, MGUS = absent.

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7
Q

What are the broad treatment stages and principles of a patient with myeloma?

A

Induction - Control disease, reduce plasma cell burden, reverse complications - possible autologous stem cell transplant.

Consolidation - Ensure durability of response.

Maintenance - Prolong or maintain response, reducing risk of relapse.

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8
Q

Why is thalidomide a valuable immunomodulatory drug for myeloma?

A

Thalidomide has anti-angiogenic properties, preventing angiogenesis around the lesion.

It also inhibits IgM antibodies (decreasing protein load), increases T4 cells, and inhibits TNF-a and IL6, reducing myeloma growth and altering its interactions with stromal cells.

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9
Q

Why is Bortezomib a valuable proteasome inhibitor in myeloma?

A

Bortezomib is a proteasome inhibitor which is more effective in cancer cells than healthy cells.

It acts directly on the myeloma, inhibiting proteasome function, as well as inhibiting TNF-a, IL6, and NFKB. It also alters the interaction between stromal and plasma cells.

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