
Panelists discuss how multiple myeloma is a rare blood cancer affecting plasma cells that have gone rogue, causing symptoms like fatigue, kidney dysfunction, and bone pain, with approximately 36,000 new cases diagnosed annually in the US, primarily affecting older patients around 60 to 65 years of age. Although multiple myeloma is highly treatable with great therapy options available, the disease often relapses and requires aggressive early treatment approaches, including emerging immunotherapies that may help cure a larger fraction of patients in the future.



![“As a community, if we’re looking to help enroll and advocate for patients with rare [kidney cancers], we need to be aware of what is out there,” said A. Ari Hakimi, MD.](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/0vv8moc6/cancernetwork/a69f69efca1ade2e100fbb9cdf798d49ea5a0f94-2966x1684.png?w=350&fit=crop&auto=format)






![“The trial will be successful, or [we’ll] declare it a success if we see at least 3 of 24 responses overall,” stated Ravi, MD, BChir, MRCP, on the phase 2 LASER trial in RCC.](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/0vv8moc6/cancernetwork/9addaac21d809a7b642a567b0a704cbb15d87ac5-2966x1684.png?w=350&fit=crop&auto=format)








