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Thalidomide breakthrough for myeloma
Adding thalidomide to the standard treatment for elderly patients with a type of cancer of plasma cells significantly improves survival, research reveals today.
A study published in the Lancet today claims the drug could extend life by 18 months.
Combination chemotherapy with melphalan and prednisone (MP) is currently the standard treatment for multiple myeloma, but the Lancet says the addition of thalidomide could prove beneficial.
Researchers from the University of Lille and the Intergroupe Francophone du Myelome studied different treatments’ effects on 447 patients newly-diagnosed with multiple myeloma aged between 65 and 75.
Of this group, 196 received MP; 125 received MP plus thalidomide (MPT); and 126 received reduced-intensity stem cell transplantation using melphalan (MEL100).
After an average follow-up of over four years, the researchers found that median overall survival times were 33.2 months for MP, 51.6 months for MPT, and 38.3 for MEL100.
Commenting on the study, Professor Gareth Morgan from the Royal Marsden hospital, London, said the results will have an “enormous impact” on how multiple myeloma is treated in the future.
“It redefines the standard treatment for patients with multiple myeloma, and makes the combination of melphalan-predisone-thalidomide the gold standard,” he said.
Eric Low, chief executive of Myeloma UK, added: “Thalidomide is undoubtedly an important treatment for patients. It is given orally, has flexible administration and has manageable side-effects.”
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