Multiple myeloma (MM) is the second most common blood cancer. Bone involvement is very common in these patients: it is estimated that between 80% and 90% will develop bone lesions during the course of the disease. This represents a potential risk of fragility and pain, significantly impacting the patient's functional status and therefore worsening their quality of life. \[1\] The presence of bone lesions also represents a risk for the development of Skeletal-Related Events (SREs), which can include: pathological fractures, vertebral compression that causes spinal cord compression, and the need for surgery or radiotherapy to treat the bone lesions. It is important to monitor and manage SREs as they are associated with increased mortality. With the improvement of treatments and increased survival rates, more and more patients require rehabilitation management, which includes therapeutic education, the prescription of orthoses/aids, and specific rehabilitation programs to address fatigue or cope with major events such as SREs. Also frequently needed are guidelines regarding safe physical activity and support for returning to work or resuming satisfying social participation. In many MM patients, bone involvement represents a challenge for the rehabilitation specialist, who must be able to perform an accurate assessment of the risks and benefits of treatment to avoid exposing the patient to unnecessary risks or complications. Managing the patient within a multidisciplinary team of specialists can improve the accuracy of the overall assessment and therapeutic recommendations. The aim of our study is to retrospectively analyze patients with a new diagnosis of MM who were managed by the Hematology Department in 2019, 2020, and 2021, in order to describe and evaluate any SREs, as well as some clinical and rehabilitation data.
Age range
18 Years
Sex
ALL
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Number of patients who experienced a Skeletal-Related Event (SRE) in the first 2 years from MM diagnosis
Timeframe: SREs will be detected in the period including 60 days before MM diagnosis to 24 months after diagnosis
Number pf patients who underwent Hospitalization due to SREs
Timeframe: between 60 days before MM diagnosis and 24 months after MM diagnosis
Number of patients reporting a pathological fracture, number of patients who needed radiation to bone, number of patients who underwent bone surgery, number of patients with spinal cord compression.
Timeframe: between 60 days before MM diagnosis and 24 months after MM diagnosis