| Literature DB >> 27540137 |
Holly L Geyer1, Heidi Kosiorek2, Amylou C Dueck2, Robyn Scherber3, Stefanie Slot4, Sonja Zweegman4, Peter Aw Te Boekhorst5, Zhenya Senyak6, Harry C Schouten7, Federico Sackmann8, Ana Kerguelen Fuentes9, Dolores Hernández-Maraver9, Heike L Pahl10, Martin Griesshammer11, Frank Stegelmann12, Konstanze Döhner12, Thomas Lehmann13, Karin Bonatz14, Andreas Reiter14, Francoise Boyer15, Gabriel Etienne16, Jean-Christophe Ianotto17, Dana Ranta18, Lydia Roy19, Jean-Yves Cahn20, Claire N Harrison21, Deepti Radia21, Pablo Muxi22, Norman Maldonado23, Carlos Besses24, Francisco Cervantes25, Peter L Johansson26, Tiziano Barbui27, Giovanni Barosi28, Alessandro M Vannucchi29, Chiara Paoli29, Francesco Passamonti30, Bjorn Andreasson26, Maria L Ferrari31, Alessandro Rambaldi27, Jan Samuelsson32, Keith Cannon33, Gunnar Birgegard34, Zhijian Xiao35, Zefeng Xu35, Yue Zhang35, Xiujuan Sun35, Junqing Xu35, Jean-Jacques Kiladjian36, Peihong Zhang37, Robert Peter Gale38, Ruben A Mesa39.
Abstract
The myeloproliferative neoplasms, including polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia and myelofibrosis, are distinguished by their debilitating symptom profiles, life-threatening complications and profound impact on quality of life. The role gender plays in the symptomatology of myeloproliferative neoplasms remains under-investigated. In this study we evaluated how gender relates to patients' characteristics, disease complications and overall symptom expression. A total of 2,006 patients (polycythemia vera=711, essential thrombocythemia=830, myelofibrosis=460, unknown=5) were prospectively evaluated, with patients completing the Myeloproliferative Neoplasm-Symptom Assessment Form and Brief Fatigue Inventory Patient Reported Outcome tools. Information on the individual patients' characteristics, disease complications and laboratory data was collected. Consistent with known literature, most female patients were more likely to have essential thrombocythemia (48.6% versus 33.0%; P<0.001) and most male patients were more likely to have polycythemia vera (41.8% versus 30.3%; P<0.001). The rate of thrombocytopenia was higher among males than females (13.9% versus 8.2%; P<0.001) and males also had greater red-blood cell transfusion requirements (7.3% versus 4.9%; P=0.02) with shorter mean disease duration (6.4 versus 7.2 years, P=0.03). Despite there being no statistical differences in risk scores, receipt of most therapies or prior complications (hemorrhage, thrombosis), females had more severe and more frequent symptoms for most individual symptoms, along with overall total symptom score (22.8 versus 20.3; P<0.001). Females had particularly high scores for abdominal-related symptoms (abdominal pain/discomfort) and microvascular symptoms (headache, fatigue, insomnia, concentration difficulties, dizziness; all P<0.01). Despite complaining of more severe symptom burden, females had similar quality of life scores to those of males. The results of this study suggest that gender contributes to the heterogeneity of myeloproliferative neoplasms by influencing phenotypic profiles and symptom expression. Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27540137 PMCID: PMC5210236 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2016.149559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941