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The risk of infection in multiple myeloma patients is significant, due to immune dysfunction secondary to myeloma, immunosenescence and age-related comorbidities, given the elderly myeloma patient demographic. Newer treatments, despite providing unprecedented improvements in disease-control, have further elevated infection risk. This risk is so substantial that we are approaching a period where a subset of older myeloma patients may be more likely to die secondary to infectious complications imposed by redirected T-cell therapy rather than from myeloma. As a result, it is essential to provide myeloma patients with the appropriate prophylaxis and monitoring against infection. In this review, we discuss disease-related, patient-related and treatment-related reasons for the increased infection risk in myeloma patients, and how to both prevent and manage this risk through creating a dynamic, infection prevention plan that is personalised to the individual patient.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.blre.2025.101287

Type

Journal article

Journal

Blood rev

Publication Date

11/04/2025

Keywords

Immunoglobulin replacement therapy, Infection, Multiple myeloma, Prophylaxis, Vaccination