Multiple myeloma grade 3, is it serious?

  Patient: My mother began to suffer from urinary incontinence around mid-January 2010, and since mid-March she has been suffering from slight pain in her lower back and occasional nosebleeds, and recently she has been experiencing mild dizziness and anemia since she was 30 or 40 years old.  1. Is my mother’s condition very serious and to what extent?  2. At present, the hospital recommends chemotherapy, but we are worried that my mother’s poor health will not be able to withstand the side effects of chemotherapy, which will aggravate her condition. I don’t know what treatment method is most appropriate.  3.If chemotherapy is not given, how should I treat and maintain her?  There are many other indicators to evaluate the severity of the disease, such as beta2 microglobulin and chromosomal abnormalities.  At present, chemotherapy should be the mainstay. Although chemotherapy has side effects, the results of no treatment are obvious. Moreover, many of the symptoms nowadays are disease-related, and relying on maintenance simply does not solve the problem. There are also many options in terms of chemotherapy regimens that do not necessarily have many side effects.