| Literature DB >> 24553173 |
Holly L Geyer1, Robyn M Scherber1, Amylou C Dueck2, Jean-Jacques Kiladjian3, Zhijian Xiao4, Stefanie Slot5, Sonja Zweegman5, Federico Sackmann6, Ana Kerguelen Fuentes7, Dolores Hernández-Maraver7, Konstanze Döhner8, Claire N Harrison9, Deepti Radia9, Pablo Muxi10, Carlos Besses11, Francisco Cervantes12, Peter L Johansson13, Bjorn Andreasson13, Alessandro Rambaldi14, Tiziano Barbui14, Alessandro M Vannucchi15, Francesco Passamonti16, Jan Samuelsson17, Gunnar Birgegard18, Ruben A Mesa19.
Abstract
Symptom burden in myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) is heterogeneous even among patients within the same MPN diagnosis. Using cluster analysis from prospectively gathered symptom burden data in 1470 international patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV), or myelofibrosis (MF), we assessed for the presence of clusters and relationship to disease features and prognosis. In MF (4 clusters identified), clusters significantly differed by Dynamic International Prognostic Scoring System (DIPSS) risk (P < .001), leukopenia (P = .009), thrombocytopenia (P < .001), and spleen size (P = .02). Although an association existed between clusters and DIPSS risk, high symptom burden was noted in some low and intermediate-1-risk MF patients. In PV (5 clusters identified), total symptom score increased across clusters (P < .001), but clusters did not significantly differ by PV risk or the risk assessment variable of age. Among ET patients (5 clusters identified), clusters differed by gender (P = .04), anemia (P = .01), and prior hemorrhage (P = .047). Total symptom score increased across clusters (P < .001), but clusters did not significantly differ by International Prognostic Score for ET risk including the risk assessment variables. Significant symptom heterogeneity exists within each MPN subtype, sometimes independent of disease features or prognosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24553173 PMCID: PMC4067502 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2013-09-527903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113