Survival and quality-of-life implications of cytopenia trajectories in ruxolitinib-treated myelofibrosis - PubMed
6 days ago
- #ruxolitinib
- #cytopenia
- #myelofibrosis
- Cytopenia is a common complication in myelofibrosis patients and can worsen with ruxolitinib treatment.
- The study categorized 879 ruxolitinib-treated patients into four groups based on cytopenia evolution: never cytopenic, treatment-emergent cytopenia, persistent cytopenia, and improved anemia.
- Baseline cytopenia was associated with significantly reduced median overall survival (3.7 vs. 6.7 years) compared to noncytopenic patients.
- Patients who remained noncytopenic had the best median overall survival (8.1 years), while those with persistent cytopenia had the worst (3.7 years).
- Treatment-emergent cytopenia showed intermediate outcomes (5.1 years), with isolated thrombocytopenia having the poorest prognosis (4.3 years).
- Improved anemia was linked to better survival (5.2 years) compared to persistent anemia (3.5 years).
- Symptom response mirrored survival trends, with the best outcomes in noncytopenic and improved anemia groups.
- The study highlights the prognostic significance of cytopenia dynamics and supports monitoring for risk stratification and treatment optimization.