Multiple Myeloma an incurable disease, but I have spent the last 25 years in remission using a blend of conventional oncology and evidence-based nutrition, supplementation, and lifestyle therapies from peer-reviewed studies that your oncologist probably hasn't told you about.
Click the orange button to the right to learn more about what you can start doing today.
“Women are at higher risk than men for severe cancer treatment-related adverse events (side effects), particularly for immunotherapy, according to a study..”
Immunotherapy can do amazingly positive things for myeloma patients. At the same time, immunotherapy, according to the study below, can cause serious side effects- especially to women.
While I didn’t undergo monoclonal antibodies, CAR-T cell therapy or bispecific antibodies when I underwent active therapy for a MM diagnosis in early 1994, I did sustain dozens of short, long-term and late stage side effects. Conventional oncology, in my opinion, has always done a poor job of side effect prevention.
The point of this post is simply to highlight the very real possibility that women will sustain serious side effects from MM therapies and that the risk of those side effects can be reduced with evidence-based, non-conventional therapies such as nutrition, exercise and probiotics.
Have you been diagnosed with MM? What stage? Are you considering immunotherapy? To learn more about evidence-based, non-conventional therapies scroll down the page, post a question or comment and I will reply to you ASAP.
Thank you,
David Emerson
Large differences in risks for severe adverse events according to sex seen for cancer patients receiving immunotherapy
“Women are at higher risk than men for severe cancer treatment-related adverse events (AEs), particularly for immunotherapy, according to a study published online Feb. 4 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Joseph M. Unger, Ph.D., from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, and colleagues examined sex differences in treatment-related AEs among patients receiving
in cancer clinical trials. The analysis included data from 23,296 patients participating in phase II and III clinical trials (202 trials) between 1980 and 2019.
The researchers found that 274,688 AEs were analyzed for patients in clinical trials (17,417 with chemotherapy; 2,319 with immunotherapy; 3,560 with targeted therapy).
Nearly two-thirds of participants (64.6 percent) experienced one or more severe (grade ≥3) AEs.
Compared with men, there was an increased risk for severe AEs observed among women (odds ratio, 1.34), including a 49 percent increased risk among those receiving immunotherapy.
A higher risk for severe symptomatic AEs was seen among women receiving all treatments, but was highest for immunotherapy (odds ratio, 1.66). Severe hematologic AEs were more common among women receiving chemotherapy or immunotherapy.
“Particularly large sex differences were observed for patients receiving immunotherapy, suggesting that studying AEs from these agents is a priority,” the authors write.”
The risk for cutaneous irAEs was higher for patients with melanoma and renal cell carcinoma and for those receiving combination therapy.