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  • 1
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 124, No. 21 ( 2014-12-06), p. 5142-5142
    Abstract: Introduction MSCs constitute a pivotal cell type capable of shaping both the architecture of the microenvironment and modulating communication between the various cell types through effects on the extracellular matrix (ECM) and by secretion of various growth factors and cytokines. MSCs and hematopoietic stem cells are thought to share the same mesenchymal origin. Some data confirm that MSCs express a functional erythropoietin receptor and JAK2-transduction pathway, but their role in the development and evolution of MPN is still not well known so our aim was the isolation, expansion and characterization of MSCs in patients affected by MPN. Some data indicates that BM-MSCs of patients affected by MPN do not carry the JAK2-V617F mutation. We studied 20 patients affected by MPN with the following characteristics: M/F 12/8, median age 53years, 8 affected by PV, 8 by ET and 4 by PMF. 15 patients were positive for JAK2 V617F mutation, 1 pts for cMPL and 2 were CARL mutations carriers. Methods: MSC were isolated by bone marrow fraction by gradient separation on Lympholyte cell separation media and expanded in culture with a specific medium (MesenCult) in plastic-adherent cultures up to the second passage. DNA was extracted from MSC using QIAmp DNA Mini kit and the study of recurrent alterations (JAK2, MPL and CARL gene mutations was performed). Results: MCS were expanded in 14 on 21 patients. Flow citometry analysis confirmed the standard MSC phenotype (CD45 negative, CD73 positive, CD90 positive and CD105 positive). The molecular analysis of JAKV617F, cMPL and CARL mutations resulted negative in all analyzed samples both in patients carriers of mutations and in wild type ones. Conclusions: We conclude that common mutations markers of MPN neoplasm are absent in the mesenchymal compartment of bone marrows of patients affected by MPN and are restricted to the neoplastic clone. This research project was supported by a grant from Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (A.I.R.C.) Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2014
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  • 2
    In: Quality of Life Research, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, Vol. 27, No. 6 ( 2018-6), p. 1545-1554
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0962-9343 , 1573-2649
    Language: English
    Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
    Publication Date: 2018
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2008960-0
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  • 3
    In: Blood Cancer Journal, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, Vol. 11, No. 6 ( 2021-06-16)
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2044-5385
    Language: English
    Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
    Publication Date: 2021
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  • 4
    In: American Journal of Hematology, Wiley, Vol. 92, No. 11 ( 2017-11), p. 1193-1197
    Abstract: Based on suggestive information from recent epidemiologic data and earlier retrospective studies, we revisited the effect of gender on survival in 1,494 patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET). The primary study population included 904 patients from the Mayo Clinic (median age 58 years; 65% females); risk distribution, according to the international prognostic score for ET (IPSET), was 23% high, 42% intermediate and 35% low. Multivariable analysis that included IPSET‐relevant risk factors identified male sex (HR 1.6, 95% CI 1.3‐2.0), age ≥60 years (HR 4.3, 95% CI 3.4‐5.4) and leukocyte count ≥11 × 10(9)/L (HR 1.5, 95% CI 1.3‐1.9) as independent predictors of shortened survival. These findings were confirmed by analysis of a separate cohort of 590 ET patients (65% females) from the University of Florence, Italy, with corresponding HRs (95% CI) of 1.6 (1.1‐2.5), 4.6 (2.2‐9.5) and 1.8 (1.1‐2.8). The independent prognostic effect of gender was further corroborated by a separate multivariable analysis against IPSET risk categories; HR (95% CI) for the Mayo Clinic/Florence cohorts were 1.5/1.6 (1.2/1.1‐1.8/2.5) for male sex, 6.8/7.5 (5.0/3.1‐9.3/18.3) for IPSET high risk and 2.8/4.1 (2.1/1.8‐3.8/9.5) for IPSET intermediate risk. Furthermore, the survival disadvantage in men was most apparent in IPSET high risk category and in patients older than 60 years. In both patient cohorts, thrombosis history garnered significance in univariate, but not in multivariable analysis. The observations from the current study suggest that women with ET live longer than their male counterparts and that gender might supersede thrombosis history as a risk variable for overall survival.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0361-8609 , 1096-8652
    URL: Issue
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2017
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  • 5
    In: American Journal of Hematology, Wiley, Vol. 89, No. 11 ( 2014-11)
    Abstract: To investigate the characteristics and clinical course of cerebral vein thrombosis (CVT) in patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) we compared 48 patients with MPN and CVT (group MPN‐CVT) to 87 with MPN and other venous thrombosis (group MPN‐VT) and 178 with MPN and no thrombosis (group MPN‐NoT) matched by sex, age at diagnosis of MPN (±5 years) and type of MPN. The study population was identified among 5,500 patients with MPN, from January 1982 to June 2013. Thrombophilia abnormalities were significantly more prevalent in the MPN‐CVT and MPN‐VT than in MPN‐NoT group ( P = 0.015), as well as the JAK2 V617F mutation in patients with essential thrombocythemia ( P = 0.059). Compared to MPN‐VT, MPN‐CVT patients had a higher rate of recurrent thrombosis (42% vs. 25%, P = 0.049) despite a shorter median follow‐up period (6.1 vs. 10.3 years, P = 0.019), a higher long‐term antithrombotic (94% vs. 84%, P = 0.099) and a similar cytoreductive treatment (79% vs. 70%, P = 0.311). The incidence of recurrent thrombosis was double in MPN‐CVT than in MPN‐VT group (8.8% and 4.2% patient‐years, P = 0.022), and CVT and unprovoked event were the only predictive variables in a multivariate model including also sex, blood count, thrombophilia, cytoreductive, and antithrombotic treatment (HR 1.97, 95%CI 1.05–3.72 and 2.09, 1.09–4.00, respectively). Am. J. Hematol. 89:E200–E205, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0361-8609 , 1096-8652
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    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2014
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  • 6
    In: American Journal of Hematology, Wiley, Vol. 96, No. 11 ( 2021-11), p. 1472-1480
    Abstract: The current retrospective study involving a total of 1607 patients was designed to identify clinical and molecular variables that were predictive of inferior myelofibrosis‐free survival (MFS) in WHO‐defined essential thrombocythemia (ET), utilizing three independent patient cohorts: University of Florence, Italy ( n  = 718); Mayo Clinic, USA ( n  = 479) and Policlinico Gemelli, Catholic University, Rome, Italy ( n  = 410). The Florence patient cohort was first examined to identify independent risk factors for MFS, which included age  〉  60 years (HR 2.5, 95% CI 1.3–4.9), male sex (2.1, 1.2–3.9), palpable splenomegaly (2.1, 1.2–3.9), CALR 1/1‐like or MPL mutation (3.4, 1.9–6.1) and JAK2 V617F variant allele frequency  〉  35% (4.2, 1.6–10.8). Subsequently, an operational molecular risk category was developed and validated in the other two cohorts from Mayo Clinic and Rome: “high molecular risk” category included patients with JAK2 V617F VAF 〉 35%, CALR type 1/1‐like or MPL mutations; all other driver mutation profiles were assigned to “low molecular risk” category. The former, compared to the latter molecular risk category, displayed significantly higher risk of fibrotic transformation: Florence cohort with respective fibrotic transformation risk rates of 8% vs. 1.2% at 10 years and 33% vs. 8% at 20 years ( p   〈  0.001; HR 6.1; 95% CI 3.2–11.7); Mayo Cohort, 16% vs. 7% at 10 years and 44% vs. 25% at 20 years ( p   〈  0.001; HR 2.5; 95% CI 1.6–4.1); and Rome cohort 7.8% vs. 4.6% at 10 years and 31.2% vs. 7.1% at 20 years ( p  = 0.007, HR 2.7; 95% CI 1.3–5.8). The present study provides practically useful risk signals for fibrotic transformation in ET and facilitates identification of patients who require close monitoring and appropriate counseling.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0361-8609 , 1096-8652
    URL: Issue
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2021
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  • 7
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 124, No. 21 ( 2014-12-06), p. 3163-3163
    Abstract: Philadelphia-negative Myeloproliferative Neoplasms (MPN), including Polycythemia Vera (PV), Essential Thrombocythemia (ET), Myelofibrosis (Primary [PMF] and secondary to PV and ET [PPV-, PET-MF] and unclassified MPN (U-MPN), are associated with an increased risk of venous thrombosis in unusual sites, such as splanchnic vessels (SVT). SVT can lead to complications such as portal hypertension, esophageal and gastric varices, ascites,hepatic failure and biliopathy. According to a meta-analysis MPN is the underlying cause of portal vein thrombosis (PVT) in 31.5% and Budd Chiari syndrome (BCS) in 40.9% of cases (Smalberg, 2012); a more in-depth analysis of clinical characteristics and evolution of MPN-associated SVT has been hampered by heterogeneity of cohorts comprising small number of cases. We conducted a retrospective multicenter study in patients (pts) with SVT associated with WHO2008-diagnosed MPN, with the aim to describe patient characteristics, disease course and prognostic factors with potential implications for clinical practice. Data were collected from 16 international hematologic centers in the framework of the Italian AGIMM and the IWG-MRT groups. We collected 519 cases of pts with PVT, splenic or mesenteric vein thrombosis (75.1%) and BCS (24.9%) associated with MPN. We used as comparator a cohort of 1686 controls (Ctr) represented by MPN without (w/o) SVT: 741 ET (43.9%), 684 PV (39.7%), 261 PMF (15.5%). Frequency of MPN associated with SVT was 37.8% ET (n=196), 36.8% PV (n=191), 15.4% MF (n=80), 10% U-MPN (n=52). Median follow-up was 89.9 months (mo) (range 0.5-430). For SVT vs Ctr group females were 54.5% vs 44.4% in PV (P=0.001), 68.4 vs 63.5% (p=0.13) in ET, 63.7% vs 29.1% in PMF (p 〈 0.0001); median age at MPN diagnosis (dg) was 43.5 yr (range 12-90) vs 60.6 yr (range 12-93) (p 〈 0.0001). Age at SVT dg was 44 yr (range 15-85). In 240 cases (46.7%) MPN and SVT dg were coincident, in 121 (23.6%) SVT occurred before MPN dg (median 26 mo, range 4-307) and in 153 (29.8%) during MPN follow up (median 68 mo, range 4-362). JAK2V617F mutation was found in 94% PV vs 94% in Ctr, 84% vs 61% ET (p 〈 0.0001), 88.1% vs 68% PMF (p=0.006) and in 93% U-MPN. Erythropoietin-independent colonies (EEC) were evaluated in 111 SVT pts and found in 80 (72%), accounting for 38/48 PV (79%), 31/44 ET (70.5%), 9/12 PMF (75%) and 2/7 U-MPN (28.6%). At dg, SVT PV pts had lower hemoglobin levels than Ctr: median was 17.4 g/dL vs 18.5 g/dL (p 〈 0.0001) in male, 16.9 g/dL vs 17.7 g/dL (p=0.0006) in female. A co-existing thrombophilic status was found in 38.5% SVT vs 11.8% of Ctr (p 〈 0.0001). Recurrent SVT occurred in 12.2% of pts with a rate of 1.6% person/year (CI 1.2-2.1); risk of venous thrombosis other than SVT was increased in SVT group vs Ctr (p=0.02), with no difference for arterial thrombosis. Hemorrhage was more frequent in SVT group (32%) vs Ctr (7.2%)(p 〈 0.0001), mainly related to esophageal varices, which were present in 66.9% of SVT pts. There was no difference in evolution to MF and acute leukemia (AL) for PV and ET pts with and w/o SVT, while risk of AL was lower in MF with SVT (p 〈 0.00001). Overall survival was shorter in ET pts with SVT vs Ctr (p 〈 0.0001). In PMF survival was better in SVT group (p 〈 0.00001) and was associated with a higher proportion of SVT pts in lowest risk categories: IPSS low 65%, intermediate-1 20%, intermediate-2 10% and high 5% compared with 15%, 34%, 25% and 26% in Ctr group. At last FU, 79/519 pts (15.2%) had died; causes of death were evolution to AL (15.4%), other cancers (13.8%), disease progression without AL (10.8%), SVT (10.8%), hepatic failure and venous thrombosis other than SVT (7.7% each), heart failure and arterial thrombosis (6.2% each), hemorrhage (5.5%), renal failure and infection (4.6% each). Therapy after SVT included anticoagulation in 77%, antiaggregant in 21.2% and combination in 1.8%; 70% received cytotoxic drugs; 12.4% were treated with transjugular porto-systemic shunt. Beta blocker therapy was used in 48.5% of pts and correlated with improved survival (p=0.041) MPN associated with SVT correlated with younger age and female sex and might antedate the clinical phenotype in a quarter of the patients. MPN-associated SVT equally affected PV and ET, was more likely to occur in the presence of JAK2V617F or underlying thrombophilia and predicted recurrent venous but not arterial thrombosis. The apparent association of SVT with better or worse prognosis in PMF and ET, respectively, requires further investigation. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2014
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  • 8
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 134, No. Supplement_1 ( 2019-11-13), p. 4490-4490
    Abstract: Background : The conditioning regimen for patients with myelolfibrosis undergoing an allogeneic HSCT is usually composed of a combination of fludarabine (FLU) with one alkylating agent, busulkfan (BU), thiotepa (THIO) or melphalan. In a recent prospective randomized study comparing BU-FLU versus THIO-FLU, the proportion of patients with full donor chimerism at 6 months, was respectively 63% and 65% (Patriarca et al, BBMT 2019). Aim of the study. Assess the rate of full donor chimerism in patients with myelofibrosis, after conditioning with one or two alkylating agents. Methods. We analyzed 113 patients with myelofibrosis, for whom chimerism data were available on day +30 . There were two groups: 35 patients were conditioned with either thiotepa-cyclophosphamide , thiotepa-fludarabine or busulfan-fludarabine (ONE-ALK), whereas 78 patients were prepared with thiotepa, busulfan, fludarabine (TBF). Patients receiving TBF were older (57 vs 52 years, p=0.008), were less frequently splenectomized pre-HSCT (30% vs 54%, p=0.03), had more frequently intermediate-2/high DIPSS scores (89% vs 74%, p=0.04) , and had comparable transfusion burden pre-HSCT (p=0.7). Chimerism was assessed via STR (PowerFlex-Promega) Results. The proportion of patients with full donor chimerism on day +30 in the TBF vs the ONE-ALK group was 87% vs 51% (p=0.00002); on day +60 these figures were 93% vs 13% (p 〈 0.0001) and on day +90 , the figures were 90% vs 21% (p 〈 0.00001). Full donor chimerism on day+30 was achieved in 81% of patients with DIPSS int1 (n=16), 74% of patients with int2 DIPSS, and 70% of patients with high risk DIPSS (p=0.6). Acute GvHD grade II-IV occurred in 27% vs 37% of patients in the two groups (p=0.7), and moderate severe chronic GvHD in 20% and 21% (p=0.8). The 5 year cumulative incidence of relapse was 8% in the TBF group, versus 50% for the ONE-ALK group (p 〈 0.0001), whereas the CI of TRM was 25% vs 11% (p=0.1). The 5 year actuarial disease free survival (DFS) was respectively 65% for TBF and 38% for the ONE-ALK group (p=0.004). Complete chimerism day+30. When looking at whether patients had (n=84) or not (n=29) full donor chimerism on day +30, the CI of relapse was respectively 44% vs 15% (p=0.002), the CI of TRM 18% vs 15% (p=0.5), and the 5 year DFS 65% vs 32% (p=0.001). Conclusions. Early full donor chimerism is a prerequisite for long term control of disease in patients with myelofibrosis undergoing an allogeneic HSCT. The combination of 2 alkylating agents in the conditioning regimen, provides a significantly higher chance of achieving full donor chimerism on day+30, and thus long term disease control. Figure Disclosures Angelucci: Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated, and CRISPR Therapeutics: Other: Partecipation in DMC; Roche: Other: Local advisory board; Jazz Pharmaceuticals: Other: Local advisory board; BlueBirdBio: Other: Local advisory board; Novartis: Honoraria, Other: Chair Steering Committee TELESTO protocol; Celgene: Honoraria, Other: Partecipation in DMC.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2019
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  • 9
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 138, No. Supplement 1 ( 2021-11-05), p. 1493-1493
    Abstract: Background The recent association of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) with COVID-19 vaccinations (JAMA; 2021; 325, N Engl J Med 2021; 384) motivated the current review of CVT and MPN. Our objectives were, i) provide an estimation of the incidence of CVT in the context of MPN, followed by a description of clinical phenotype and therapeutic strategies, ii) determine long term outlook in terms of recurrent thromboses, hemorrhage, and survival, iii) identify salient features which distinguish MPN associated from COVID vaccine- related CVT. Methods 74 consecutive MPN patients with CVT that underwent evaluation at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester MN, USA (n=36), Catholic University, Rome, Italy, (n=23), and University of Florence, Italy (n=15) between 1991 and 2021 were included. The cohort from a previously published multi-center study that included 42 MPN cases with CVT, which were not included in the current study, was used for comparison of observations. Diagnosis of CVT was established with computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging with venography. Results Patient characteristics at time of CVT Among 74 patients with CVT and MPN (median age 44 years, range 15-85; 61% females); disease-specific frequencies were 1.3% (39/2,893), 1.2% (21/1,811) and 0.2% (3/1,888) for essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV) and primary myelofibrosis (PMF), respectively. CVT occurred prior to (n=20, 27%, median time to MPN diagnosis 16.5 months), at (n=32, 44%) or after (n=21, 29%, median time to CVT 26 months) MPN diagnosis. 72% of patients presented with headaches, 22% visual changes, 12% nausea/vomiting, 8% neurological deficits, and 6% seizures. Transverse (51%), sagittal (43%) and sigmoid (35%) sinuses were involved with central nervous system hemorrhage in 10 (14%) patients. MPN phenotype included ET (n=39, 53%), PV (n=21, 28%), pre-fibrotic MF (n=6, 8%), MPN-unclassified (n=4, 5%), PMF (n=3, 4%) and post-PV MF (n=1, 1%). Driver mutation testing was performed in 65 patients: 91% harbored JAK2V617F, 3% CALR type 1, 2% MPL, 5% triple negative; moreover, JAK2V617F was mutated in 27/33 (82%) ET patients. An underlying thrombophilia was identified in 19 (31%) cases. No patient had thrombocytopenia. (Table 1). Notably, one patient received the Ad26.COV2.S vaccine, five days prior to presenting with CVT, not associated with thrombosis in other sites, thrombocytopenia or platelet factor 4 antibodies. A history of thrombosis was documented in 10 (14%) patients with three splanchnic venous events. These observations were similar to those noted in our comparative group from a previously published report that included 42 cases; (ET (n=25, 60%), PV (n=11, 26%), PMF (n=5, 12%); median age 51 years, range 16-84; 55% females; 81% JAK2V617F mutated). Prior thrombosis occurred in 8(19%) patients with four splanchnic venous events. Treatment for CVT included systemic anticoagulation alone in 27 (36%) patients or in conjunction with aspirin (n=24, 32%), cytoreductive therapy (n=14, 19%), or both aspirin and cytoreduction (n=9, 12%). 5/21 (24%) patients with CVT post MPN diagnosis, were on anticoagulation at the time of CVT. Outcome following CVT At a median follow-up of 5.1 years (range; 0.1-28.6), recurrent CVT was documented in 3 (4%) patients; incidence rates for other arterial and venous thromboses and hemorrhage were 11% (2 per 100 patient-years), 9% (1.9 per 100 patient-years) and 14% (3 per 100 patient-years), respectively. 3 of 7 (43%) venous thromboses were splanchnic events. Antithrombotic therapy was ongoing in 53% and 80% of patients with thrombotic recurrences and hemorrhage, respectively. A higher incidence of venous thrombosis was noted in the aforementioned previously published cohort (12 (29%) vs 7 (9%), p=0.01); with 5/12 (42%) splanchnic events. Incidence rates for arterial thrombosis and major hemorrhage were similar. Fibrotic and leukemic transformation occurred in 5 (8%) and 1(1%) patient, respectively, with five (7%) deaths unrelated to CVT. Conclusions The current study highlights close association of CVT with JAK2V617F, younger age, and female gender. Clinical features distinguishing COVID vaccine-related from MPN-associated CVT include lower likelihood of concomitant non-CVT venous thromboses with the latter; moreover, the absence of thrombocytopenia resulted in a lower rate of intracerebral hemorrhage in MPN cases; as a result, MPN-CVT was not fatal. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Vannucchi: AbbVie: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Incyte Corporation: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Bristol Myers Squibb: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Novartis: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2021
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  • 10
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 132, No. Supplement 1 ( 2018-11-29), p. 4279-4279
    Abstract: INTRODUCTION The incidence of secondary cancer (SC) in patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) is high and comparable to that of thrombosis. However, the identification of patient subgroups that might be at increased susceptibility of developing SC has not been systematically addressed. We report here the results of an international case-control study (MPN-K) aimed at comparing the frequency of exposure to possible causes of SC in patients with classical MPN, polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythemia (ET) and myelofibrosis (MF). METHODS This European Leukaemia Network (ELN) study reports MPN patients from 28 sites of 5 European countries and Israel, diagnosed in the period from 2000 to 2016. Cases were MPN patients with concomitant diagnosis of a non-myeloid SC (n=15) or its presentation during the course of the disease (n=412). Controls were MPN patients cancer-free, matched to the paired case for sex, age (±5 years), date of MPN diagnosis (±5 years), and MPN disease duration (±6 years). A multivariable conditional logistic regression model was used to estimate the effect of selected variables on total SC risk and in different types of SC. RESULTS Among 1,259 MPN patients, there were 427 cases and 832 matched controls. Cases presented melanoma (n=20; 4.7%), non-melanoma skin cancer (n=69; 16.2% - basal/squamous cell carcinoma), non-skin solid cancer (n=290; 67.9%) including breast, ovary/uterus, colorectal, upper gastrointestinal, liver/pancreas, lung, prostate/urinary, other and lymphoproliferative diseases (n=48; 11.2%) including multiple myeloma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, low and high grade B- and T-lymphoma. At diagnosis, there were slightly more patients with PV among SC cases (n= 152; 35.6%) than controls (n=256; 30.8%), while conversely there were slightly less ET patients among cases (n=196; 45.9%) than controls (n=426; 51.2%). Cases and controls presented similar proportion of MF diagnosis (n=79 cases, 18.5% and 150 controls, 18.0%). Driver mutations (JAK2 V617, EXON-12, CALR, MPL), non-driver mutations and abnormal karyotype were equally represented in cases and controls. Other variables such as cardiovascular risk factors, exposure to cancerogens, family history of cancer and chronic inflammatory diseases were reported with similar frequency in cases and controls. After MPN diagnosis, exposure to first and other lines of treatments until the index event, with Phlebotomy (n=193; 15.3%), Hydroxyurea (n=814; 64.7%), Anagrelide (n=14; 1.1%), Interferon (n=30; 2.4%), Pipobroman (n=8; 0.6%), Busulphan (n=13; 1.0%), Ruxolitinib (n=11; 0.9%), was similar in the two groups except for aspirin that was used less frequently (p=0.043) in cases (n=320; 74.9%) compared to controls (n=664; 79.9%). In particular, the lower use of aspirin was circumscribed to non-skin solid tumors. A multivariable analysis was carried out in all patients and stratified by different type of tumors (Table). In non-skin solid cancers, the time to exposure of the MPN disease 〉 5 years (OR=2.95; 95% CI 1.54-5.66, p=0.001) and the PV phenotype (OR=2.40, 95% CI 1.15-5.01, p=0.020) were more burdened by the incidence of events than the reference ET group. No difference in SC risk was found for MF patients compared to patients with ET. Interestingly, the independent protective role of aspirin retained its statistical significance only in non-skin SC. In non-melanoma skin cancer, multivariable analysis revealed that the presence of JAK2 mutation was less associated with SC (OR=0.32, 95% CI 0.13-0.81, p=0.016) and confirmed that exposure to HU and other cytotoxic agents was associated with a significantly higher risk of SC (OR=6.00, 95% CI 1.23-29.28, p=0.027 and OR=9.80, 95% CI 1.24-77.78, p=0.031, respectively). This finding was not seen in non-skin SC and in lymphoma. CONCLUSION The considered clinical and biological features, at MPN diagnosis, were not different in cases with SC and controls. During the course of the disease, three factors significantly and independently affected the risk of SC in these MPN patients: 1) patients with PV had a 77% higher risk than those with ET, 2) patients with MPN duration of more than 5 years had a twice higher risk than those with lower duration, 3) for the first time, we documented that in non-skin solid cancers, aspirin treatment reduced SC risk of 38%. Exposure to HU and other cytoreductive drugs was confirmed as a risk factor for non-melanoma skin cancer. Disclosures Palandri: Novartis: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Speakers Bureau. Marchetti:Gilead: Consultancy; takeda: Speakers Bureau; amgen: Speakers Bureau; janssen: Speakers Bureau. Griesshammer:Novartis: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Speakers Bureau.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2018
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