AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of serum erythropoietin (Epo) levels as an initial diagnostic tool for polycythemia vera (PV) in patients with absolute erythrocytosis (AE), comparing it to existing diagnostic criteria from the Polycythemia Vera Study Group and the World Health Organization.
  • - Data was collected from 241 patients suspected of erythrocytosis, revealing that 87% of PV patients had low serum Epo levels, indicating that low Epo levels can help in diagnosing PV with high specificity and predictive value.
  • - The authors suggest that measuring serum Epo should be a primary diagnostic step for AE patients due to its simplicity, reliability, and cost-effectiveness.*

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: The diagnosis of polycythemia vera (PV) is based on clinical and biological criteria defined by either the Polycythemia Vera Study Group (PVSG) or the World Health Organization (WHO). Both the PVSG and WHO PV criteria have proved helpful and are extensively used, yet diagnostic strategies and scheduling of biological investigations vary. We assessed the value of measuring serum erythropoietin (Epo) as a first intention diagnostic test in patients with absolute erythrocytosis (AE).

Design And Methods: Serum and bone marrow (BM) samples of 241 patients with a suspicion of erythrocytosis were collected in 8 hospital centers. One hundred and ninety had an absolute erythrocytosis (116 had PV, 66 had secondary erythrocytosis and 4 had idiopathic erythrocytosis). Serum Epo was assayed (ELISA) in 186. Statistical analysis (ROC curves) was used to define serum Epo thresholds that were specific for PV and secondary erythrocytosis and to analyze the diagnostic value of a low or high serum Epo level.

Results: A large majority of PV patients (87% or 101/116) had a serum Epo level below the normal range in healthy patients (3.3 IU/L), giving this value a specificity of 97% with a 97.8% positive predictive value for the diagnosis of PV. Statistical analysis (ROC curves) defined two thresholds allowing a specific and direct diagnosis of 65.6% (65/99) of untreated PV (Epo < 1.4 IU/L) and 19.7% (13/66) of those with secondary erythrocytosis (Epo > 13.7 IU/L).

Interpretation And Conclusions: Based on these data, we propose that measurement of serum Epo level, a simple, reliable and inexpensive test, should be considered as a first intention diagnostic test for patients with absolute erythrocytosis.

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