This qualitative study uncovered treatment experience–related concepts that study participants with RRMM reported as important. A central theme that resulted from this analysis was the burden of time dedicated to following the prescribed treatment regimen, with participant-perceived unfavorable factors including the duration of the typical day of treatment and the duration of infusions and injections of existing treatment. Participants indicated that they often plan their lives around treatment days due to the duration of infusion treatment and prolonged impacts of treatment-related side effects that can occur. Many participants expressed experiencing gastrointestinal issues or fatigue and the need to plan their activities around when these side effects have resolved and they have more energy.
Participants’ perceptions of treatment effectiveness depended largely on symptom relief and clinical signs. While many participants utilized symptom relief to indicate the effectiveness of the treatment, some had difficulty relying solely on this as they continued to experience symptoms following treatment and others were asymptomatic. Therefore, it is particularly important that healthcare providers share the results of the clinical tests with their patients, as many participants reported using this information to determine whether the treatment is working.
The results of our analysis were consistent with the symptoms and impacts of RRMM reported in the literature. The side effects endorsed by participants in this study were similar to those reported by participants with RRMM in the study conducted by Parsons et al. (e.g., fatigue, pain, gastrointestinal symptoms, sleep disturbances, mood swings) [16].
Our results were consistent with previous patient preference studies among patients with RRMM, in which drug administration (i.e., therapy mode of administration, number and duration of physician visits) has been identified as the most important factor in patients’ treatment decision-making [17, 18]. Mode of administration and the amount of time spent receiving therapy have also been identified as being associated with RRMM patients’ perceptions of treatment convenience [13]. In previous studies, some patients with RRMM have prioritized, preferred, and/or had higher satisfaction with oral treatments, and in some cases have observed a willingness to accept a less effective therapy in exchange for more convenient treatments or treatments with less impact on quality of life (typically oral treatments) [17–19]. Compared with oral therapies, injectable therapies have been associated with increased time burden and higher indirect costs in patients with RRMM [13]. In the COLUMBA clinical trial, patients with RRMM reported greater treatment satisfaction with subcutaneous daratumumab therapy compared with intravenous infusion of daratumumab, and higher satisfaction with subcutaneous daratumumab therapy was maintained over 10 treatment cycles [20]. Previous research has shown that prolonged duration of therapy is associated with better outcomes in patients with RRMM and identified the need to remove barriers to extended duration of treatment (i.e., until progression), such as improving treatment convenience [21]. Ensuring that RRMM treatment regimens are effective, tolerable, and convenient enough for patients may improve real-world adherence and enable patients to derive the full clinical benefits of treatment [14].
We focused more on patient-reported treatment-related experiences than symptom-related concepts in our study, as previous qualitative studies have assessed the symptom burden of MM [22]. The treatment burden associated with the mode of administration for RRMM therapies is not typically examined in clinical trials, which focus more on safety and efficacy rather than other parts of the treatment experience that are important to patients (e.g., time, scheduling) [14]. Previous research has reported that the potential for treatment-free intervals is relevant to treatment decision-making for patients with MM as well as healthcare providers, suggesting that the burden of treatment plays a role in these treatment decisions and highlighting the need to gather evidence on patients’ treatment experiences [23]. Our qualitative interview results help fill the evidence gap for treatment experience–related data to further understand the patient experience as it relates to treatment burden in order to better inform treatment decision-making.
We acknowledge some limitations of our study. As is common among qualitative interview-based studies, the information reported here was drawn from a relatively small sample of participants (N = 22). Although evidence of concept saturation was observed in the qualitative dataset, suggesting robustness of the qualitative analysis, caution should be taken when interpreting results due to the small sample size. The study protocol was amended partway through data collection and broadened the number of lines of prior therapy from up to 3 lines to up to 6 lines. The study population may be skewed toward patients with fewer relapses (68.2% of our study sample had ≤ 2 relapses); only four participants (18.2%) had ≥ 4 relapses, so we may have under-sampled patients with more substantial relapse experience. However, by opening eligibility to patients with more prior lines of therapy, the study may have expanded to include patients with more severe conditions and a longer duration of living with myeloma, and therefore a different perspective. These patients may have come to terms with the severity of their condition and therefore minimized their symptom experience or treatment burden. In addition, our study population was composed only of white and Black/African American participants and as such may miss the experiences of patients from other ethnicities or racial groups. Although the absolute number of Black or African American participants in our study sample was small (n = 4), the proportion was higher than the general US population (18.2% vs 13.4%) [24] and closer to the ~ 20% MM case distribution observed in Black patients in the US [25], so our data may capture the prevalence of MM, which disproportionately affects Black patients [26]. Finally, selection bias is possible due to the in-person interview design and outpatient sample. The study inclusion criteria focused on less severe cases, so the population was skewed towards less heavily treated patients (i.e., those with fewer relapses) who tend to be ambulatory (i.e., not hospitalized) with better functional status and more able to participate in the onsite in-person interviews conducted in this study.