School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Beijing Chaoyang Hospital, Beijing, China.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2024 May 2;24(1):102. doi: 10.1186/s12874-024-02227-0.
Multiple myeloma (MM) is the second most common haematological cancer worldwide. Along with related diseases including monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS), plasma cell leukaemia (PCL) and plasmacytoma, MM incidence is rising, yet it remains incurable and represents a significant disease burden. Clinical registries can provide important information on management and outcomes, and are vital platforms for clinical trials and other research. The Asia-Pacific Myeloma and Related Diseases Registry (APAC MRDR) was developed to monitor and explore variation in epidemiology, treatment regimens and their impact on clinical outcomes across this region. Here we describe the registry's design and development, initial data, progress and future plans.
The APAC MRDR was established in 2018 as a multicentre collaboration across the Asia-Pacific, collecting prospective data on patients newly diagnosed with MM, MGUS, PCL and plasmacytoma in Korea, Singapore, Malaysia and Taiwan, with China recently joining. Development of the registry required a multidisciplinary team of clinicians, researchers, legal and information technology support, and financial resources, as well as local clinical context from key opinion leaders in the APAC region. Written informed consent is obtained and data are routinely collected throughout treatment by hospital staff. Data are stored securely, meeting all local privacy and ethics requirements. Data were collected from October 2018 to March 2024.
Over 1700 patients from 24 hospitals have been enrolled onto the APAC MRDR to date, with the majority (86%) being newly diagnosed with MM. Bortezomib with an immunomodulatory drug was most frequently used in first-line MM therapy, and lenalidomide-based therapy was most common in second-line. Establishment and implementation challenges include regulatory and a range of operational issues.
The APAC MRDR is providing 'real-world' data to participating sites, clinicians and policy-makers to explore factors influencing outcomes and survival, and to support high quality studies. It is already a valuable resource that will continue to grow and support research and clinical collaboration in MM and related diseases across the APAC region.
多发性骨髓瘤(MM)是全球第二常见的血液系统恶性肿瘤。与包括意义未明的单克隆丙种球蛋白病(MGUS)、浆细胞白血病(PCL)和浆细胞瘤在内的相关疾病一起,MM 的发病率正在上升,但仍无法治愈,且给患者带来了沉重的疾病负担。临床登记处可以提供关于管理和结果的重要信息,是临床试验和其他研究的重要平台。亚太骨髓瘤和相关疾病登记处(APAC MRDR)旨在监测和探索该地区流行病学、治疗方案及其对临床结果的影响的变化。本文介绍了该登记处的设计和开发、初始数据、进展和未来计划。
APAC MRDR 于 2018 年成立,是一个跨亚太地区的多中心合作项目,在韩国、新加坡、马来西亚和中国台湾地区收集新诊断为 MM、MGUS、PCL 和浆细胞瘤患者的前瞻性数据,中国最近也加入了该登记处。该登记处的开发需要由临床医生、研究人员、法律和信息技术支持以及财务资源组成的多学科团队,以及来自亚太地区的关键意见领袖提供当地临床背景。患者在治疗过程中会获得书面知情同意并由医院工作人员定期收集数据。数据安全存储,符合所有当地的隐私和伦理要求。数据收集自 2018 年 10 月至 2024 年 3 月。
截至目前,已有 24 家医院的 1700 多名患者入组 APAC MRDR,其中大多数(86%)患者为新诊断为 MM。硼替佐米联合免疫调节剂是 MM 一线治疗中最常用的药物,来那度胺为基础的治疗方案在二线治疗中最常见。建立和实施面临的挑战包括监管和一系列运营问题。
APAC MRDR 正在为参与的机构、临床医生和决策者提供“真实世界”的数据,以探讨影响结果和生存的因素,并支持高质量的研究。它已经是一个有价值的资源,将继续发展壮大,并支持亚太地区 MM 及相关疾病的研究和临床合作。