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The ONS Podcast

Oncology Nursing Society
The ONS Podcast
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  • The ONS Podcast

    Episode 405: Long-Term Multiple Myeloma Considerations for Oncology Nurses

    06/03/2026 | 34min
    "The disease is increasingly managed as a chronic condition rather than a diagnosis with an immediate terminal outcome. Particularly, with earlier and more effective and sustained treatment options, we can make this disease a very chronic, long-term, livable condition. I want to make sure that patients are aware that this is not a death sentence. This is something that patients can live with for the long term," Ann McNeill, RN, MSN, APN, nurse practitioner at the John Theurer Cancer Center at Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, NJ, told Lenise Taylor, MN, RN, AOCNS®, TCTCN™, oncology clinical specialist at ONS, during a conversation about long-term multiple myeloma considerations for oncology nurses.
    Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod
    Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 
    Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at courses.ons.org by March 6, 2027. Ann McNeill is on the speakers' bureau for Pfizer. This financial relationship has been mitigated. All other planners and faculty for this episode have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose. ONS is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
    Learning outcome: Learners will report an increase in knowledge related to management of long-term side effects related to multiple myeloma and treatment.
    Episode Notes 
    Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. 
    ONS Podcast™ episodes: Episode 401: Multiple Myeloma Treatment Considerations for Oncology Nurses
    Episode 398: An Overview of Multiple Myeloma for Oncology Nurses
    Episode 339: A Lesson on Labs: How to Monitor and Educate Patients With Cancer
    Episode 201: Which Survivorship Care Model Is Right for Your Patient?

    ONS Voice articles: Effective Care Transitions Are Essential for New Multiple Myeloma Treatments
    Infection Prevention for Oncology Nurses
    Multiple Myeloma Prevention, Screening, Treatment, and Survivorship Recommendations
    Nurse-Led Survivorship Programs
    Sexual Considerations for Patients With Cancer

    Oncology Nursing Forum articles:  A Qualitative Study of the Experiences of Living With Multiple Myeloma
    Changes in Health-Related Quality of Life During Multiple Myeloma Treatment: A Qualitative Interview Study

    ONS book: Multiple Myeloma: A Textbook for Nurses (third edition)
    ONS Huddle Cards: Pain Management
    Sexuality
    Survivorship Care Plan

    ONS Learning Libraries: Hematology, Cellular Therapy, and Stem Cell Transplantation
    Survivorship

    ONS Symptom Intervention resources: Chronic Pain
    Fatigue
    Peripheral Neuropathy

    American Cancer Society: Living as a Multiple Myeloma Survivor
    Blood Cancer United: Resources for Healthcare Professionals
    International Myeloma Foundation: Resources and Support for the Myeloma Community
    Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation: Empower Patients and the Community
    To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities. 
    To find resources for creating an ONS Podcast club in your chapter or nursing community, visit the ONS Podcast Library.
    To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email [email protected].
    Highlights From This Episode
    "We do consider myeloma an incurable hematologic malignancy, even though we have had improvements in survival. But just like for any malignancy, our goal is to maximize survival. We want to eliminate as many myeloma cells as we possibly can. And subsequently, we want to improve the quality of life for these patients in the long term. So those are basically our treatment goals. That's what we think of when we're treating patients all throughout their treatment journey." TS 1:39
    "It is very typical for patients along their journey to have received several lines of therapy. I think it's important to realize that the cells acquire new mutations, making them more resistant to these further subsequent lines of therapy. We see quicker, more aggressive relapses in those patients with multiple prior lines of therapy. We can see an increase in the CRAB symptoms, which are the calcium elevations, the renal dysfunction, profound anemia, and even bone disease. We can see a rapid rise in the monoclonal protein in the labs or even a very rapid rise in the involved light chain in that serum free light chain assay, so it's important to monitor these labs." TS 9:14
    "All oncology nurses are focusing on these survivorship plans now. And I think that's a great thing when you think about a diagnosis of cancer and a survivorship plan, because it means these patients are living a longer time. We still look at long-term health maintenance guidelines depending on the patient's sex and their age. ... I think preventing infection is always going to be something absolutely on the forefront in our survivorship plan with myeloma. I mean, myeloma is an immune system malignancy. The treatments that we have given patients can sometimes, especially in later life therapies, further compromise the immune system. So, we're always looking to prevent serious infection." TS 12:46
    "Patients get treatment, especially induction therapy. They may or may not get transplant. They may have been on a very minor maintenance schedule, depending on their age. And they feel really well. And then they decide not to return for their follow-up because they feel so good. I think nurses are critical in the communication aspect of the patient-provider aspect. So, nurses are really the key means of communication. The providers are absolutely important—the physicians, the nurse practitioners and every other member of the team—but I think the nurses have a really special rapport with patients. They're usually the ones providing the education on the treatment regimens. They're managing the toxicity profiles. They're doing all the coordination of care between visits. They are really going to be the ones telling the patient, 'Hey, you're going to feel good and that's a wonderful thing, but you still need to come once a month or once every six weeks or once every two months for your labs.'" TS 15:17 
    "It has been amazing. The science, the research, the treatments, the approvals from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Survivorship has improved dramatically. Let's take the first few years of the new century, right? The five-year survival rate was about 38%. If you then jump to 2015–2019, which is still seven plus years ago, it has doubled. So, we're talking about anywhere from 60%–80% over a five-year survival. So that's an amazing improvement in their five-year survival rate for myeloma." TS 23:28
    "Survivorship in myeloma begins at diagnosis, not just after treatment. And I think that because it is managed as a chronic, often relapsing disease, it does require lifelong evolving care. Patients should realize that they will know us for the rest of their lives. We will know everything about you. I always tell them, 'I will know everything about your hobbies, your children, your grandchildren, what you love to do on the weekends.' It's very important that that point is made right at diagnosis, not just after so many lines of treatment. It's very important that we are going to follow these patients throughout their journey." TS 28:18
  • The ONS Podcast

    Episode 404: Tailor Patient Treatment Education for Non-Oncology Indications

    27/02/2026 | 38min
    "We print education sheets that we have, and we say, 'Just ignore this part that says cancer. You're getting this med but for a different indication.' And then you have to really point out what our goals of care are. You're using the information that, as oncology nurses, we like and love, but we're having to cross it out and say, 'Just read this portion and just do this here.' And that can be challenging for the nurse and probably confusing for the patient," ONS member Brandy Thornberry, RN, OCN®, outpatient infusion and VAD supervisor at Logan Health in Kalispell, MT, told Lenise Taylor, MN, RN, AOCNS®, TCTCN™, oncology clinical specialist at ONS, during a conversation about education for patients receiving antineoplastic drugs for non-oncology indications. Taylor also spoke with ONS members Lizzy McMahon, BSN, RN, OCN®, and Jennifer Lynch, BSN, RN, TCTCN™, about general antineoplastic treatment education and tailoring education in the stem cell transplantation setting.
    Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod
    Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 
    Earn 0.75 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at courses.ons.org by February 27, 2027. The planners and faculty for this episode have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose. ONS is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
    Learning outcome: Learners will report an increase in knowledge of best practices for educating patients receiving antineoplastic therapies across oncology, non‑oncology, and stem cell transplant settings.
    Episode Notes 
    Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. 
    ONS Podcast™ episodes:
    Episode 259: Patient Education for Health Literacy and Limited English Proficiency
    Episode 197: Patient Learning Needs and Educational Assessments
    Episode 183: How Oncology Nurses Find and Use Credible Patient Education Resources
    Episode 179: Learn How to Educate Patients During Immunotherapy
    Episode 173: Oncology Nurses' Role in Stem Cell Transplants for Pediatric Sickle Cell Disease
    ONS Voice articles:
    Online Tool Helps You Apply Health Literacy Principles to Written Patient Education
    Personalized Patient Education: Ensure Effective, Inclusive, and Equitable Patient Education With These Five Strategies
    Policies and Procedures for Written Patient-Facing Cancer Education Materials
    Oncology Nursing Forum article: An Integrative Review of Patient Education During Inpatient Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
    ONS Hematology, Cellular Therapy, and Stem Cell Transplantation Learning Library
    Patient Education Sheets: Cancer Care, Explained
    To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities.
    To find resources for creating an ONS Podcast club in your chapter or nursing community, visit the ONS Podcast Library.
    To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email [email protected].
    Highlights From This Episode
    McMahon: "A great question would be to ask the patient what they already know and what they're most concerned about or what their biggest questions are. This way, the nurse can tailor their education to make sure to focus on what the patient doesn't know yet and what they're most concerned about, while still touching on all the required education topics. … It's also important for nurses to continually be assessing the patient's readiness to learn throughout the education session, looking for nonverbal cues or verbal signs that the patient is overwhelmed or anxious because this is going to interfere with their ability to take in new information." TS 3:49
    Thornberry: "A lot of the education sheets and the products for them explain it like, 'This is cancer,' and more of an oncology perspective, so occasionally [non-oncology patients] can show up and be confused by it. I do feel like they come a little bit less prepared than our oncology patients. Our rheumatologists and neurologists, they sure try, but they just don't have the support in that realm either. They're full of every question you can imagine. They've never been to an infusion room. They don't know what to bring. Can they drink water and have their meds beforehand? It's a full gamut of really preparing them to get these for autoimmune or rheumatology-type issues." TS 14:12
    Lynch: "I really want to spend time with those patients to make sure that we are not assuming that they are coming to us with any knowledge or experience. I want them to be able to come to us with questions and trust their healthcare team and really sit down with them and say, 'Okay, you don't have cancer, but we're using the word chemotherapy where we're talking about cancer drugs.'… And we're going to probably spend more time going over some of the basics about blood stem cells, types of cells that they grow into, how your body fights infection, what they're going to be at risk for. The side effects can be pretty scary when you're talking about them, especially back to back. So making sure that we are delivering the information that doesn't put them in a panic mode… A lot of reassurance, as well, and just taking into consideration that, yes, this might have this whole other layer of anxiety to it because of the unknown." TS 32:22
  • The ONS Podcast

    Episode 403: Pharmacology 101: Checkpoint Inhibitors

    20/02/2026 | 34min
    "Because the premise of immune checkpoint blockade centers around elevating the immune function, we should always take a great deal of caution around those patients who have high immune risks. Those include patients with autoimmune disorders. That's one of our biggest questions that we ask, usually every consult that we're seeing with solid tumor. 'Do you have any history of autoimmune disorders? Tell me a little bit more about it. Is it being treated? What are your symptoms like?' And then also patients who have undergone organ transplants. Now, interestingly, this does include stem cell transplants," Kelsey Finch, PharmD, BCOP, oncology pharmacist practitioner at Columbus Regional Health in Indiana, told Jaime Weimer, MSN, RN, AGCNS-BS, AOCNS®, manager of oncology nursing practice at ONS, during a conversation about checkpoint inhibitors.
    Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod
    Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 
    Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at courses.ons.org by February 20, 2027. Kelsey Finch has disclosed a speakers bureau relationship with AstraZeneca. This financial relationship has been mitigated. ONS is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
    Learning outcome: Learners will report an increase in knowledge related to checkpoint inhibitors in the treatment of cancer.
    Episode Notes 
    Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. 
    ONS Podcast™ episodes: Pharmacology 101 series
    Episode 273: Updates in Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy
    Episode 174: Administer Pembrolizumab Immunotherapy With Confidence
    Episode 139: How CAR and Other T Cells Are Revolutionizing Cancer Treatment

    ONS Voice articles: Here's Why Oncology Nurses Are Pivotal in Managing Immune-Related Adverse Events
    Make Subcutaneous Administration More Comfortable for Your Patients
    Nursing Considerations for ICI-Related Myocarditis
    Oncology Nurses Navigate the Changing Landscape of Immuno-Oncology
    Postdischarge ICI Patient Education Eliminates Hospital Readmissions
    Shorter Administration Times Still Require High-Acuity Care

    ONS Voice oncology drug reference sheets: Dostarlimab-Gxly
    Nivolumab and Hyaluronidase-Nvhy
    Nivolumab and Relatlimab-Rmbw
    Pembrolizumab and Berahyaluronidase Alfa-Pmph
    Retifanlimab-Dlwr
    Toripalimab-Tpzi

    ONS books: Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy Guidelines and Recommendations for Practice (second edition)
    Guide to Cancer Immunotherapy (second edition)

    ONS course: ONS/ONCC® Chemotherapy Immunotherapy Certificate™
    Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing articles: Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor–Related Myocarditis: Recognition, Surveillance, and Management
    Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy: Key Principles When Educating Patients
    Triple M Syndrome: Implications for Hematology-Oncology Advanced Practice Providers

    ONS Huddle Cards: Checkpoint Inhibitors
    Immunotherapy

    ONS Learning Libraries: Genomics and Precision Oncology Learning Library
    Immuno-Oncology Learning Library

    Drugs@FDA package inserts
    National Comprehensive Cancer Network homepage
    OncoLink: All About Immunotherapy
    To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities. 
    To find resources for creating an ONS Podcast club in your chapter or nursing community, visit the ONS Podcast Library.
    To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email [email protected].
    Highlights From This Episode
    "Before immune checkpoint blockade, the two-year overall survival rate in metastatic melanoma was hovering around 10%. After these agents came to market, depending on the trial and the agents used, that number actually increased to about 50%–65%. So, five times the amount of patients were actually living at the two-year mark. Not surprisingly, studies then exploded across several tumor types, leading to approvals in all sorts of cancers, mostly in the solid tumor. But there are a couple hematologic as well. Lung cancer, kidney cancer, head and neck, Hodgkin lymphoma, hepatocellular, the list goes on. So, it's really just transforming the stage IV setting across all tumors, specifically from uniformly fatal prognosis to one where durable responses and long-term survival is also possible." TS 3:03
    "There are four different mechanisms officially being used in therapies that are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Those are cytotoxic T-lymphocyte–associated protein 4, programmed cell death protein 1, and programmed cell death ligand 1, which I'm counting as two different mechanisms, even though they somewhat work together. And lymphocyte-activation gene 3 is the fourth one that's in there. So, all these mechanisms impact the T cell in our immune system. The T cell is traditionally responsible for protecting our body from harmful things like bacteria, viruses, and cancer. When the tumor binds to cytotoxic T-lymphocyte–associated protein 4 receptors, that happens on the T cell itself. And that inhibits the activation of the T cells, essentially allowing that tumor to then live. So when developing medications that block this receptor, they noted an added benefit that it actually increased the T-cell proliferation as well as keeping that T cell active. So not only are we not blocking the T cells, we're making them more productive." TS 5:38 
    "If you have a chance of any sort of tissue rejection, specifically with allogeneic stem cell transplants or where we see that focusing on it, there's a little bit of controversy, mixed bag on opinions as far as autologous stem cell transplants. But it's best to at least exercise a little bit of caution. If they have a chance of organ rejection, is that worth the risk of the therapy that we're looking to give? And then, patients with HIV, any sort of immunologic concerns at baseline that we could potentially worsen." TS 14:37
    "As a rule of thumb, with immune checkpoint blockade, regardless of what mechanism you're looking at, if something in your body can get inflamed, that can wind up as an adverse event. So, whenever I talk to my patients, the key word is anything ending in '-itis.' ... The most common adverse events that we end up seeing are dermatitis and hypothyroidism. Immune checkpoint blockade can cause both hyper- and hypothyroidism. Very often, we actually start in the hyper- and then end up, for lack of better words, burning out the thyroid, ultimately leading to a sustained hypothyroidism." TS 18:34
    "The half-life of immune checkpoint inhibitors is usually around 30 days, meaning that once these agents are given, the drug will be in the patient's system for up to five months. Specifically, it will probably build month to month, so often we don't even see a lot of our adverse events until month three or four. Usually, when we're that far into treatment, we're not looking for new adverse events in things like chemotherapy. But these drugs do build over time." TS 24:28
    "As far as safe handling is concerned, these agents are not chemotherapy. That makes drug compounding and administration pretty straightforward. When looking at the follow-up care, the most important thing, in my opinion, is to engage in meaningful dialogue with your patients. A lot of the side effects can be nonspecific. So, really listening to the patient and evaluating changes in their lifestyle, I think it'll get you far. We usually hark in on the new, worsening, or persistent whenever we're talking to patients because they'll be looking for things as well. So, just having a dialogue of how their life has changed can certainly help." TS 26:17
  • The ONS Podcast

    Episode 402: Radiation Site-Specific Side Effects: Head and Neck Cancer

    13/02/2026 | 25min
    "It's important to clarify that most patients will experience and at least some side effects—and often several. So prevention really means reducing severity, complications, and long-term impact rather than avoiding side effects altogether. This process starts before radiation begins and continues throughout the treatment and includes dental evaluation, baseline swallowing assessments, and thorough patient education," ONS member Astrid Amoresano, RN, OCN®, lead oncology nurse specialist at New York Proton Center in New York, NY, told Jaime Weimer, MSN, RN, AGCNS-BS, AOCNS®, manager of oncology nursing practice at ONS, during a conversation about side effects of radiation for head and neck cancer.
    Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod
    Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0
    Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at courses.ons.org by February 13, 2027. The planners and faculty for this episode have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose. ONS is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
    Learning outcome: Learners will report an increase in knowledge related to radiation side effects in people with head and neck cancer.
    Episode Notes 
    Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. 
    ONS Podcast™ episodes:
    Cancer Symptom Management Basics series
    Episode 301: Radiation Oncology: Side Effect and Care Coordination Best Practices
    Episode 128: Manage Treatment-Related Radiodermatitis With ONS Guidelines™
    ONS Voice articles:
    Highly Localized, Precision Radiation Therapies Require Nurses to Drive Care Coordination, Patient Education
    IMRT Shows Similar Quality-of-Life Outcomes to Proton Therapy in Head and Neck Cancer
    How to Handle Even the Worst Radiation Therapy Side Effects
    ONS book: Manual for Radiation Oncology Nursing Practice and Education (fifth edition)
    ONS courses:
    ONS/ONCC® Radiation Therapy Certificate™
    ONS Oncology Symptom Management
    Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing articles:
    The Role of Advanced Practice Providers in Radiation Oncology in 2025
    Systematic Review of Malnutrition Risk Factors to Identify Nutritionally At-Risk Patients With Head and Neck Cancer
    Effects of a Nurse-Initiated Telephone Care Path for Pain Management in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer Receiving Radiation Therapy
    Radiation-Induced Skin Dermatitis: Treatment With CamWell® Herb to Soothe® Cream in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer Receiving Radiation Therapy
    ONS Radiation Learning Library
    ONS Symptom Intervention Resources
    ONCC: Radiation Oncology Certified Nurse (ROCN™)
    American Cancer Society
    CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians article: American Cancer Society Head and Neck Cancer Survivorship Care Guideline
    Cancer Survivors Network: Head and neck cancer
    Head and neck cancer resources
    Radiation therapy resources
    American Society of Radiation Oncology
    National Cancer Institute: Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE)
    National Comprehensive Cancer Network
    To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities.
    To find resources for creating an ONS Podcast club in your chapter or nursing community, visit the ONS Podcast Library.
    To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email [email protected].
    Highlights From This Episode
    "Many tumors in the region are very radiosensitive, and radiation can be used either as definitive treatment or after surgery to reduce the risk of reoccurrence, but in many cases, radiation is combined with chemotherapy to improve local control. Because so many vital structures are located in this small complex area, radiation allows us to treat the cancer while minimizing the need for extensive or disfiguring surgery." TS 2:40
    "The most common acute side effects of head and neck radiation: effects to the mouth, the throat, the skin, and the energy level. Patients often experience a mucositis, pain or sore throat, difficulty swallowing, dry mouth, or thick saliva, and taste changes. Skin irritation and redness in the treatment field is also common and can progress to dry and moist desquamation. Fatigue is another frequent side effect and tends to build as treatment progresses. Emotional and psychological distress are also very common in this patient population and can have an impact on daily function and quality of life. Side effects usually develop gradually, often beginning in the second and third week of radiation and may be more severe or have an earlier onset in patients receiving concurrent chemotherapy." TS 4:02
    "Pain management is essential so patients can continue eating and drinking. Supporting the energy level and maintaining hydration are also key, as fatigue and dehydration can significantly worsen other side effects. Oral care protocols help manage mucositis and nutrition support may include supplements or enteral feeding if needed." TS 11:24
    "Sexual health might not be the first thing nurses think of in regard to head and neck radiation. … But even though radiation for head and neck cancer doesn't involve the reproductive organs, it can still have a significant impact on sexual health and intimacy. Like fatigue, pain, dry mouth, changes in speech and visible changes in appearance can all affect body image and relationships." TS 14:52
    "One of the common misconceptions is that side effects end when radiation ends. In reality, some effects peak afterward or become long term. Xerostomia, or dry mouth, and taste changes are good examples. While some patients improve, others adjust to a new normal where dry mouth and altered taste are permanent." TS 19:53
  • The ONS Podcast

    Episode 401: Multiple Myeloma Treatment Considerations for Oncology Nurses

    06/02/2026 | 37min
    "You also want to deal with patient preferences. We do want to get their disease under control. We want to make them live a long, good quality of life. But do they want to come to the clinic once a week? Is it a far distance? Is geography a problem? Do they prefer not taking oral chemotherapies at home? We have to think about what the patient's preferences are to some degree and kind of incorporate that in our decision-making plan for treatments for relapsed and refractory myeloma," Ann McNeill, RN, MSN, APN, nurse practitioner at the John Theurer Cancer Center at Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, NJ, told Lenise Taylor, MN, RN, AOCNS®, TCTCN™, oncology clinical specialist at ONS, during a conversation about multiple myeloma treatment considerations.
    Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod
    Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 
    Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at courses.ons.org by February 6, 2027. Ann McNeill has disclosed a speakers bureau relationship with Pfizer. This financial relationship has been mitigated. ONS is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
    Learning outcome: Learners will report an increase in knowledge related to the treatment of multiple myeloma.
    Episode Notes 
    Complete this evaluation for free NCPD.
    ONS Podcast™ episodes: Episode 398: An Overview of Multiple Myeloma for Oncology Nurses
    Episode 395: Pharmacology 101: Monoclonal Antibodies
    Episode 372: Pharmacology 101: Proteasome Inhibitors

    ONS Voice articles: Effective Care Transitions Are Essential for New Multiple Myeloma Treatments
    New Multiple Myeloma Treatments Present New Challenges in Side Effect Management
    Reduce Racial Barriers and Care Inequities for Black and African American Patients With Multiple Myeloma

    ONS Voice FDA approval alerts
    ONS Voice oncology drug reference sheets: Belantamab mafodotin-blmf
    Daratumumab
    Motixafortide
    Selinexor

    Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing articles: Journey of a Patient With Multiple Myeloma Undergoing Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation
    Optimizing Transitions of Care in Multiple Myeloma Immunotherapy: Nurse Roles

    Oncology Nursing Forum article: Facilitators of Multiple Myeloma Treatment: A Qualitative Study
    ONS books: Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation: A Manual for Nursing Practice (third edition)
    Multiple Myeloma: A Textbook for Nurses (third edition)

    ONS course: ONS Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation™
    ONS Huddle Cards: Financial Toxicity
    Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT)
    Monoclonal Antibodies

    ONS Hematology, Cellular Therapy, and Stem Cell Transplantation Learning Library
    American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)–Ontario Health: Treatment of Multiple Myeloma Living Guideline
    International Myeloma Foundation: Clinical Trials Fact Sheets
    Clinical Trial Support
    Resource Library

    Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation resource: Treatments for Multiple Myeloma
    To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities. 
    To find resources for creating an ONS Podcast club in your chapter or nursing community, visit the ONS Podcast Library.
    To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email [email protected].
    Highlights From This Episode
    "Typically for our first-line therapies, we use certain classes of drugs and some of them are proteasome inhibitors like bortezomib and carfilzomib. We also have IMiDs or immunomodulatory agents like thalidomide, lenalidomide, and pomalidomide. We have monoclonal antibodies, anti-CD38 monoclonal antibodies. Of course, we can never talk about treatment for myeloma without mentioning dexamethasone. It is an integral part of our treatment regimen. Most of our frontline therapies now are not just a single agent. They're not even doublets anymore. Typically, they're triplet therapies. And now in 2026, it's leaning more toward quadruplet therapies. By that, I mean you're taking a proteasome inhibitor, an immunomodulatory drug, dexamethasone, and an anti-CD38 monoclonal antibody all together to present patients with a good chance their induction therapy will lead to a good chance of them responding to treatment." TS 4:25
    "[With] myeloma labs, there should be some indication after each cycle of therapy that the treatment is working. So, you don't have to do a whole myeloma panel, but maybe getting a monoclonal protein spike, maybe getting a free light chain assay, or maybe an immunoglobulin G or immunoglobulin A level, just to see if the treatment is working. So, those labs are crucial to determine whether the therapies are working. And again, the lab improvements usually correlate with the clinical presentation of the patient." TS 11:01
    "There are active clinical trials ongoing with drugs like cell mods. Cell mods are the new oral anticancer agents for myeloma that have shown great promise with efficacy and safety profiles. And then there are other combinations that are showing a lot of promise. So, drugs that are already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). And I'm talking about pairing anti-CD38 monoclonal antibodies with bispecific T-cell engagers. If you do that, there has been some evidence that these combinations are very efficacious and responses are durable. And there are ongoing clinical trials and studies being done right now to see if these can be FDA-approved to pinpoint where they are as far as in comparison to other treatments." TS 20:10
    "I always tell patients to try to participate in safe, and I want to stress safe, physical activity. So, I tell patients, the more you sit on the couch or you sit in the chair for most of the day, that unfortunately will make your pain worse. So, trying to get up and about and doing some physical activity, such as getting a physical therapy evaluation and a treatment program, no matter how passive or mild or gentle it is, can really help these patients with bone pain." TS 26:10
    "I think it's important to realize that myeloma has had amazing advances in science, research and treatments. I think that all of these things coming together, all the science and clinical trials and everything like that, has led to a significant increase in overall survival of our patients, which ultimately is a great thing. We want patients to live longer and they're living longer with a very good quality of life. So, I think it's important to realize that myeloma is very well studied, very well researched, and it's still ongoing with many, many clinical trials." TS 36:04

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Where ONS Voices Talk Cancer Join oncology nurses on the Oncology Nursing Society's award-winning podcast as they sit down to discuss the topics important to nursing practice and treating patients with cancer. ISSN 2998-2308
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