Your doctor may have told you that your multiple myeloma has come back, also known as a relapse. This means your multiple myeloma is no longer responding to the medications you’re taking.
For this reason, it may be time to change your treatment. POMALYST® (pomalidomide) is proven to help you fight disease progression after you have received REVLIMID® (lenalidomide) and a proteasome inhibitor.†
POMALYST is taken in combination with one or two other medications.‡
Learn more about how POMALYST works here.
†POMALYST is taken in combination with dexamethasone on days 1-21 of a 28-day cycle.
‡According to an analysis of the triplet regimen, POMALYST (pomalidomide) + low-dose dexamethasone + daratumumab. This
analysis includes both intravenous and subcutaneous formulations of daratumumab. Data collection time: August 2021-February 2022.
Multiple myeloma is currently an incurable disease. Treatment can significantly reduce the number of myeloma cells. But these cells can stop responding to medication, which allows them to multiply uncontrollably. This is called a relapse, and starts the cycle of multiple myeloma once more.
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