AI Article Synopsis

  • Therapeutic decision-making for primary myelofibrosis (PMF) is becoming increasingly complex due to new treatments like stem cell transplants and investigational drugs.
  • A study involving 1,054 PMF patients identified key survival predictors, including age over 65, low hemoglobin, high leukocyte counts, and constitutional symptoms, leading to the creation of a new risk stratification system with four distinct risk groups.
  • This new system offers improved accuracy in predicting survival compared to earlier models and shows that certain cytogenetic abnormalities matter more for patients in intermediate-risk groups; however, the JAK2V617F mutation did not correlate with specific risk outcomes.

Article Abstract

Therapeutic decision-making in primary myelofibrosis (PMF) is becoming more challenging because of the increasing use of allogeneic stem cell transplantation and new investigational drugs. To enhance this process by developing a highly discriminative prognostic system, 1054 patients consecutively diagnosed with PMF at 7 centers were studied. Overall median survival was 69 months (95% confidence interval [CI]: 61-76). Multivariate analysis of parameters obtained at disease diagnosis identified age greater than 65 years, presence of constitutional symptoms, hemoglobin level less than 10 g/dL, leukocyte count greater than 25 x 10(9)/L, and circulating blast cells 1% or greater as predictors of shortened survival. Based on the presence of 0 (low risk), 1 (intermediate risk-1), 2 (intermediate risk-2) or greater than or equal to 3 (high risk) of these variables, 4 risk groups with no overlapping in their survival curves were delineated; respective median survivals were 135, 95, 48, and 27 months (P< .001). Compared with prior prognostic models, the new risk stratification system displayed higher predictive accuracy, replicability, and discriminating power. In 409 patients with assessable metaphases, cytogenetic abnormalities were associated with shorter survival, but their independent contribution to prognosis was restricted to patients in the intermediate-risk groups. JAK2V617F did not cluster with a specific risk group or affect survival.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2008-07-170449DOI Listing

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