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Nursing Management of Subcutaneous Daratumumab at Home: A Safe and Effective Procedure for Frail Patients with Multiple Myeloma
Background: Treatment of Multiple Myeloma (MM) is often difficult due to patient (pts) frailty, bone lesions/fractures that can hinder transport and/or long distance from the hospital. The availability in the Viterbo province of a Domiciliary Hematologic Care Unit (DHCU) allowed to overcome these di...
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Published in: | Blood 2024-11, Vol.144 (Supplement 1), p.7616-7616 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background: Treatment of Multiple Myeloma (MM) is often difficult due to patient (pts) frailty, bone lesions/fractures that can hinder transport and/or long distance from the hospital. The availability in the Viterbo province of a Domiciliary Hematologic Care Unit (DHCU) allowed to overcome these difficulties Methods: Herein, the nursing experience in 22 patients with MM [M/F 10/12 (45.5/54.5), median age 71.8 years, interquartile range (IQR) 64.3 - 78.8] treated as outpatients with subcutaneous (sc) daratumumab (dara) is reported, as part of the Myel-Home project . The initial 2 dara administrations, either intravenous or sc, were given in hospital to prevent side effects, while subsequent administrations were done as outpatients: the first dara administration as outpatient was done by nurse and physician, while subsequent ones by nurse only Results: The main reasons for the activation of home-care modality by responsible physician were as follows: bone lesions/fractures secondary to MM in 15 pts (68.2%), age > 80 years in 2 pts (9.1%), long distance from the hospital in 3 pts (13.6%) and poor social conditions in 2 pts (9.1%). Distance from DHCU to pts home was < 20 Km in 2 cases ( 9.1%), ≥ 20 < 40 Km in 13 (59.1%) and ≥ 40 Km in 7 (31.8%). As to the phase of disease, 11 pts were in 1st line treatment, and 11 in 2nd or subsequent lines of treatment: among 11 pts treated in 1st line, 5 were transplant eligible and 6 transplant ineligible. On the whole, 212 administrations of sc-dara were performed by DHCU nurses as outpatient: during and/or immediately after home administration, only one pt had adverse events (grade 2 allergic reaction according WHO), leading to dara permanent discontinuation after the 2nd dose at home. Main adverse events during the course of domiciliary treatment were infections (pneumonia in 5 pts, sepsis in 2, cystitis in 1) and deep vein thrombosis in 1 pts. One pt was not yet evaluable for response and one pt discontinued early: among the evaluable 20 pts, 3 achieved a stringent complete remission, 7 a very good partial remission and 2 a partial remission, with an overall response rate of 60%, 6 pts had a stable disease and 2 pts a disease progression. At the last follow-up, 13 pts are alive and 9 pts died (5 from disease progression, 3 from infective complications and 1 from heart disease). Median overall survival from the start of home management was 38.9 months (95%CI 18.5 - 59.2). Conclusions: Nursing treatment at home with sc-d |
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ISSN: | 0006-4971 1528-0020 |
DOI: | 10.1182/blood-2024-208726 |