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Second primary malignancy in myelofibrosis patients treated with ruxolitinib

Authors :
Elena Maria Elli
Florian H. Heidel
Uros Markovic
Fabrizio Pane
Gianpietro Semenzato
Daniela Bartoletti
Francesca Palandri
Giulia Benevolo
Mauro Krampera
Malgorzata Monika Trawinska
Micaela Bergamaschi
Mario Tiribelli
Giovanni Caocci
Lucia Catani
Elisabetta Abruzzese
Massimo Breccia
Rossella Stella
Antonio Cuneo
Fabio D'Amore
Alessandro Isidori
Costanza Bosi
Monica Crugnola
Lisa Gandolfi
Domenico Russo
Alessandra Iurlo
Nicola Polverelli
Roberto M. Lemoli
Michele Cavo
Gianni Binotto
Roberto Latagliata
Francesco Cavazzini
Bruno Martino
Daniele Cattaneo
Nicola Vianelli
Novella Pugliese
Luigi Scaffidi
Massimiliano Bonifacio
Mariella D'Adda
Alessia Tieghi
Giuseppe Auteri
Giuseppe A. Palumbo
Polverelli N.
Elli E.M.
Abruzzese E.
Palumbo G.A.
Benevolo G.
Tiribelli M.
Bonifacio M.
Tieghi A.
Caocci G.
D'Adda M.
Bergamaschi M.
Binotto G.
Heidel F.H.
Cavazzini F.
Crugnola M.
Pugliese N.
Bosi C.
Isidori A.
Bartoletti D.
Auteri G.
Latagliata R.
Gandolfi L.
Martino B.
Scaffidi L.
Cattaneo D.
D'Amore F.
Trawinska M.M.
Stella R.
Markovic U.
Catani L.
Pane F.
Cuneo A.
Krampera M.
Semenzato G.
Lemoli R.M.
Vianelli N.
Breccia M.
Russo D.
Cavo M.
Iurlo A.
Palandri F.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Ruxolitinib (RUX), the first JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor approved for myelofibrosis (MF) therapy, has recently been associated with the occurrence of second primary malignancies (SPMs), mainly lymphomas and non-melanoma skin cancers (NMSCs). We analyzed the incidence, risk factors and outcome of SPMs in 700 MF patients treated with RUX in a real-world context. Median follow-up from starting RUX was 2·9years. Overall, 80 (11·4%) patients developed 87 SPMs after RUX start. NMSCs were the most common SPMs (50·6% of the cases). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that male sex [hazard ratio (HR): 2·37, 95% confidence interval (95%CI): 1·22–4·60, P=0·01] and thrombocytosis>400×109/l at RUX start (HR:1·98, 95%CI: 1·10–4·60, P=0·02) were associated with increased risk for SPMs. Risk factors for NMSC alone were male sex (HR: 3·14, 95%CI: 1·24–7·92, P=0·02) and duration of hydroxycarbamide and RUX therapy>5years (HR: 3·20, 95%CI: 1·17–8·75, P=0·02 and HR: 2·93, 95%CI: 1·39–6·17, P=0·005 respectively). In SPMs excluding NMSCs, male sex (HR: 2·41, 95%CI: 1·11–5·25, P=0·03), platelet>400×109/l (HR: 3·30, 95%CI: 1·67–6·50, P=0·001) and previous arterial thromboses (HR: 3·47, 95%CI: 1·48–8·14, P=0·004) were shown to be associated with higher risk of SPMs. While it is reassuring that no aggressive lymphoma was documented, active skin surveillance is recommended in all patients and particularly after prolonged hydroxycaramide therapy; oncological screening should be triggered by thrombocytosis and arterial thrombosis, particularly in males.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8d8abbcaca804c8d9620fa8227a1112f