- Debureaux, Pierre-Edouard;
- Harel, Stéphanie;
- Parquet, Nathalie;
- Lemiale, Virginie;
- Siguret, Virginie;
- Goubeau, Laurie;
- Morin, Florence;
- Royer, Bruno;
- Cuccuini, Wendy;
- Elessa, Dikelele;
- Theves, Floriane;
- Brignier, Anne C;
- Azoulay, Elie;
- Arnulf, Bertrand;
- Talbot, Alexis
Hyperviscosity syndrome (HVS) is a rare complication of newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM) related to high tumour burden. Studies about the prognosis of HVS in modern-era therapy for NDMM are missing. We investigated a retrospective cohort study of NDMM with HVS between 2011-2021. Thirty-nine NDMM patients with HVS were included. HVS presentation was heterogeneous, with asymptomatic, mild, and neurological forms in 23%, 59%, and 18% of cases, respectively. No thrombosis or major bleeding was observed. Therapeutic plasma exchanges were used in 92% of patients, which were effective and well tolerated. No rebound effect was observed. All patients except one had at least one CRAB criterion. Most of the patients received bortezomib and high-dose steroids (95%) associated with an immunomodulatory drug (43%) or alkylating agents (42%). HVS in NDMM patients had dismal overall survival matched to multiple myeloma patient controls (without HVS) in our center (median: 3.6 vs. 7.7 years, p=0.01), as confirmed by multivariate analysis. Early deaths (in the first two months) occurred in 21% of older patients (>65 years). HVS in NDMM patients is a rare but life-threatening complication associated with high lethality in older patients and be a potential dismal prognosis factor in the modern treatment era.