Anti-body building: The exercise of advancing immune based myeloma therapies

The last decade has seen a marked improvement in the outcomes of patients with multiple myeloma. Much of this has been due to not only the advent of new therapies, but their inherent ability to be combined into 3 and 4 drug regimens without resulting in unacceptable toxicity. The general gestalt has...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood reviews 2021-07, Vol.48, p.100789-100789, Article 100789
Hauptverfasser: Richter, Joshua, Thibaud, Santiago
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The last decade has seen a marked improvement in the outcomes of patients with multiple myeloma. Much of this has been due to not only the advent of new therapies, but their inherent ability to be combined into 3 and 4 drug regimens without resulting in unacceptable toxicity. The general gestalt has been to combine agents of varied mechanisms of action. With the primary classes of agents such as proteasome inhibitors and immunomodulatory drugs as bases, the advent of antibody-based therapy in myeloma has allowed us to easily augment these therapies; much in the same way rituximab impacted the lymphoma world. With the approvals of daratumumab, elotuzumab and isatuximab; the myeloma world was ushered into the next wave of targeted agents. Here, we take a look at the current landscape of “off-the-shelf” antibody-based therapies in myeloma and peer into the next wave of multi-functional targeted agents.
ISSN:0268-960X
1532-1681
DOI:10.1016/j.blre.2020.100789