| Literature DB >> 34098836 |
Dayu Shi1, Hongxia Shi1, Xiaoli Liu2, Minghui Duan3, Junling Zhuang3, Xin Du4, Ling Qin5, Wuhan Hui6, Rong Liang7, Meifang Wang8, Ye Chen9, Dongyun Li10, Wei Yang11, Gusheng Tang12, Weihua Zhang13, Xia Kuang14, Wei Su15, Yanqiu Han16, Limei Chen17, Jihong Xu18, Zhuogang Liu11, Jian Huang19, Chunting Zhao20, Hongyan Tong21, Jianda Hu22, Chunyan Chen23, Xiequn Chen24, Zhijian Xiao25, Qian Jiang1,26.
Abstract
We explored variables associated with patient-reported outcomes (PROs) including symptom burden, impact on daily life and work, obstacles during therapy, satisfaction level with therapy, and health-related quality of life in 1500 respondents with myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) including essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV) and myelofibrosis (MF) in a multicenter, cross-sectional study across China, a representative of the developing countries. In multivariate analyses, urban household registration and higher education level were significantly-associated with no symptoms at diagnosis in respondents with ET or MF. CALR mutation was significantly-associated with lower MPN-10 scores in respondents with MF. Higher MPN-10 scores were significantly-associated with negative impact on daily life and work as well as lower satisfaction level in respondents with ET, PV and MF. Receiving ruxolitinib was significantly-associated with high satisfaction and satisfaction in respondents with MF. In addition, other demographics and clinical variables were also impacting PROs.Entities:
Keywords: CALR mutation; MPN-10; Myeloproliferative neoplasm; patient-reported outcome; ruxolitinib
Year: 2021 PMID: 34098836 DOI: 10.1080/10428194.2021.1933481
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leuk Lymphoma ISSN: 1026-8022