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Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results Edward Libby M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine, Medical Oncology Director, Multiple Myeloma Service Seattle, Washington
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Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Feb 11, 2022

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Page 1: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Edward Libby M.D.Associate Professor of Medicine, Medical OncologyDirector, Multiple Myeloma ServiceSeattle, Washington

Page 2: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Lets be honest….what comes out of your doctors mouth in the office is often confusing gibberish

Page 3: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Blood testing – this pamphlet is a valuable resource for patients

Page 4: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> If you or a family member or friend can at least roughly interpret your blood tests then you will feel more confident about how you are doing

> You will know when things are going well and when they are not

> You will have more confidence about your future and not be waiting helplessly for the other shoe to drop

But it is really important that patients have a handle on what their disease is doing !

Page 5: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> Waldenstroms macroglobulinemia is a disease of small B lymphocytes, plasmacytoid lymphocytes and plasma cells

> A sort of “hybrid” disease with several different but similar and related cell types together causing symptoms

> To confirm the diagnosis of WM a bone marrow biopsy is mandatory

Bone marrow testing: Why do we need it, how do we do it and what does it mean ?

Page 6: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> Usually is in the bone marrow primarily

> Sometimes in the lymph nodes and/or spleen

> For the physician to know with confidence what a patient has a bone marrow biopsy is required

> A clear diagnosis helps to avoid “therapeutic misadventures”

Bone marrow testing: Why do we need it, how do we do it and what does it mean ?

Page 7: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Bone marrow testing: Why do we need it, how do we do it and what does it mean ?

Page 8: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Bone marrow with WM cells

Page 9: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

A bone marrow technician prepares the slides for the microscope

Page 10: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Pathologists look at the sample through a microscope

Page 11: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Bone marrow from a patient with Waldenstromsmacroglobulinemia

Lymphocytes

Plasma cell

Page 12: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

A recent bone marrow biopsy report

Page 13: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

>A genetic mutation in the abnormal cells that is specific to WM

> Important to have this requested on the bone marrow biopsy in WM

>The mutation is present (positive) in 90-95% of WM patients

MYD88 testing

Page 14: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> A genetic mutation in the abnormal cells that informs the oncologist as to how well you will respond to ibrutinib

> Important to have this requested on the bone marrow biopsy in WM

> The mutation is present (positive) in 30-40% of WM patients

> You would prefer not to be CXCR4 (+), this means you will respond more slowly and less completely to Ibrutinib

CXCR4 testing

Page 15: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> To follow the results of treatment

> To monitor for complications

> To monitor for return of the disease

What is the value of getting regular blood testing for WM ?

Page 16: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

>Three major types of cells in the bloodstream

>White blood cells (WBCs) – fight infection

>Red blood cells (hemoglobin and/or hematocrit) –carry oxygen

>Platelets- help blood to clot

Complete blood count (CBC)

Page 17: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results
Page 18: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results
Page 19: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Recent complete blood count on a WM patient

White blood cells

HemoglobinHematocrit

Platelets

Normal range

Page 20: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Recent complete blood count on a WM patient

Page 21: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> Lots of general information taken from this test

> But….alot of it really is not specifically relevant to WM

> Kidney function (creatinine)

> Measurement of minerals and electrolytes such as potassium and magnesium

> Liver function testing

Basic metabolic profile, BMP, metabolic panel

Page 22: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Example of a metabolic panel

Page 23: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Normal lymphocytes and plasma cellsBone marrow where lymphocytes and plasma cells are made

Bone marrow where lymphocytes and plasma cells are made

Waldenstroms macroglobulinemia cells (abnormal lymphocytes, plasma cells and lymphoplasmacytic cells)

Page 24: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Immunology –the most important wayto see what your WM is up to

Page 25: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Immunology –the most important wayto see what the WM is up to

Page 26: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> IgM level

> M spike

> Serum viscosity

> Higher IgM level = viscosity goes up = thicker blood

> Even if the test says the blood is abnormally viscous (thick), you may have NO symptoms !

> We should not treat the number…..treat the patient

> No symptoms or signs….no treatment

WM and blood testing: what should matter to you

Page 27: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

Key WM labs: serum (blood) electrophoresis level and the total IgM level

M-spike, SPEP, electrophoresis

Total immunoglobulin (antibody) level

Page 28: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> The IgM level is a combination/total of the normal and the abnormal IgM

> We all have normal IgM in our bodies

> WM patients have both normal and abnormal IgM in their bloodstream

What is the electrophoresis ( SPEP or M-spike) level mean ? Which is more important the IgM level or the M-spike ?

Page 29: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

A normal serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP)

Page 30: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

An abnormal serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP)

This is the “true” M-spikeThe electrophoresis or SPEP result

Page 31: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results
Page 32: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> This is what most oncologists use to follow the disease

> Some get an SPEP (M-spike), some do not

> Your IgM will never be zero, we all have a certain amount of normal IgM in our bodies

> The goal of treatment is for you to feel better…not to get the IgM into the normal range

> Most WM patients will not get their IgM into the normal range and that’s OK as long as they feel better and their blood counts(anemia) improve

My advice - focus on the total IgM

Page 33: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> In general it is not useful to obtain serum viscosity in a WM patient who is stable

> Viscosity may be elevated but the viscosity level does not matter if the patient feels fine

> Patient do not have symptoms until the

viscosity level is > 3-4 centipoise (cp)

> Some patients do not have symptoms

even at very high viscosity levels

What about viscosity ?

Page 34: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results

> Symptoms of mild hyperviscosity – headache, recurrent nosebleeds, vision changes, dizziness, vertigo (spinning sensation) and deafness

> If severe - confusion, dementia, stroke, or coma. Heart failure and other heart problems are less common

> Treatment – plasma exchange

What about viscosity ?

Page 35: Understanding your blood and bone marrow test results