F railty-adjusted therapy i n T ransplant N on- E ligible patient s with newly diagno s ed Multiple Myeloma (FiTNEss (UK-MRA Myeloma XIV Trial)) : a study protocol for a randomised phase III trial
Author
Coulson, Amy BethRoyle, Kara-Louise
Pawlyn, Charlotte
Cairns, David A
Hockaday, Anna
Bird, Jennifer
Bowcock, Stella
Kaiser, Martin
de Tute, Ruth
Rabin, Neil
Boyd, Kevin
Jones, John
Parrish, Christopher
Gardner, Hayley
Meads, David
Dawkins, Bryony
Olivier, Catherine
Henderson, Rowena
Best, Phillip
Owen, Roger
Jenner, Matthew
Kishore, Bhuvan
Drayson, Mark
Jackson, Graham
Cook, Gordon
Publication date
2022-06-02
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Introduction: Multiple myeloma is a bone marrow cancer, which predominantly affects older people. The incidence is increasing in an ageing population.Over the last 10 years, patient outcomes have improved. However, this is less apparent in older, less fit patients, who are ineligible for stem cell transplant. Research is required in this patient group, taking into account frailty and aiming to improve: treatment tolerability, clinical outcomes and quality of life. Methods and analysis: Frailty-adjusted therapy in Transplant Non-Eligible patients with newly diagnosed Multiple Myeloma is a national, phase III, multicentre, randomised controlled trial comparing standard (reactive) and frailty-adjusted (adaptive) induction therapy delivery with ixazomib, lenalidomide and dexamethasone (IRD), and to compare maintenance lenalidomide to lenalidomide+ixazomib, in patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma not suitable for stem cell transplant. Overall, 740 participants will be registered into the trial to allow 720 and 478 to be randomised at induction and maintenance, respectively.All participants will receive IRD induction with the dosing strategy randomised (1:1) at trial entry. Patients randomised to the standard, reactive arm will commence at the full dose followed by toxicity dependent reactive modifications. Patients randomised to the adaptive arm will commence at a dose level determined by their International Myeloma Working Group frailty score. Following 12 cycles of induction treatment, participants alive and progression free will undergo a second (double-blind) randomisation on a 1:1 basis to maintenance treatment with lenalidomide+placebo versus lenalidomide+ixazomib until disease progression or intolerance. Ethics and dissemination: Ethical approval has been obtained from the North East-Tyne & Wear South Research Ethics Committee (19/NE/0125) and capacity and capability confirmed by local research and development departments for each participating centre prior to opening to recruitment. Participants are required to provide written informed consent prior to trial registration. Trial results will be disseminated by conference presentations and peer-reviewed publications. Trial registration number: ISRCTN17973108, NCT03720041.Citation
Coulson AB, Royle KL, Pawlyn C, Cairns DA, Hockaday A, Bird J, Bowcock S, Kaiser M, de Tute R, Rabin N, Boyd K, Jones J, Parrish C, Gardner H, Meads D, Dawkins B, Olivier C, Henderson R, Best P, Owen R, Jenner M, Kishore B, Drayson M, Jackson G, Cook G. Frailty-adjusted therapy in Transplant Non-Eligible patients with newly diagnosed Multiple Myeloma (FiTNEss (UK-MRA Myeloma XIV Trial)): a study protocol for a randomised phase III trial. BMJ Open. 2022 Jun 2;12(6):e056147. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056147Type
ArticleAdditional Links
http://bmjopen.bmj.com/PMID
35654466Journal
BMJ OpenPublisher
BMJ Publishing Groupae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056147