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Impact of daratumumab on stem cell mobilization and collection, engraftment and early post-transplant complications among multiple myeloma patients undergoing autologous stem cell transplantation.

Evangelos Eleutherakis-PapaiakovouEvangelos TerposNikolaos KanelliasMagdalini MigkouMaria GavriatopoulouIoannis Ntanasis-StathopoulosDespoina FotiouPanagiotis MalandrakisFoteini TheodorakakouVasiliki SpiliopoulouIoannis V KostopoulosOurania TsitsiloniPanagiotis TsirigotisMeletios-Athanasios DimopoulosEfstathios Kastritis
Published in: Leukemia & lymphoma (2023)
Autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) remains a standard therapy for multiple myeloma (MM) patients. Our study aimed to assess the impact of daratumumab-containing induction on stem cell (SC) mobilization, apheresis and hospitalization. We evaluated 200 newly diagnosed MM patients that were mobilized for SC collection and which received induction with ( N  = 40) or without daratumumab ( N  = 160). Dara group patients required more frequent use of plerixafor, larger collection volumes, and had lower SC yield. 87.5% (35/40) of dara group patients achieved the planned yield of ≥ 5 × 10^6 CD34+/kg for at least one transplant compared to 96.2% (154/160) of patients in the non-dara group. Dara group patients had delayed hematopoietic recovery (11 vs 10 days for PMN > 0.5 × 10E9/l), required more transfusions (4 vs 2 plts), prolonged hospitalization (20 vs 18 days), more febrile episodes and prolonged antibiotic administration. Despite daratumumab effect patients finally achieved a successful stem cell collection and proceeded to transplant.
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