Abstract

Background:Smoking is linked to several malignancies, including myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN). However, the direct impact of smoking on JAK2V617 allele burden (JAK2) has not been examined in MPN.Aims:To compare JAK2 over time among smokers and non‐smokers with MPN.Methods:A post‐hoc analysis was conducted on the DALIAH‐trial (NCT01387763). The study consisted of newly diagnosed patients with either essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV), prefibrotic myelofibrosis (pre‐MF) or primary myelofibrosis (PMF) according to the WHO criteria. Patients who were naïve to cytoreductive treatment were enrolled in the study and randomized to treatment with recombinant pegylated interferon alpha‐2 (r‐IFNα) or hydroxyurea (HU). History of smoking prior to inclusion was collected retrospectively. Patients were defined as smokers if they had any daily tobacco consumption at baseline. JAK2 was measured by qPCR on whole blood. Molecular and clinicohematological response assessment was done using the ELN 2009 and EUMNET 2005 criteria. All patients provided written informed consent. A repeated measurements analysis was applied. JAK2 values were logit transformed for testing. Through backward elimination, the model was cleared for factors, which did not affect the model (p > 0.05). The model tested for differences in predicted change of JAK2 by smoking status.Results:A history of smoking was available for patients from 4/9 study sites (140/203 patients, Table 1). There was a more rapid predicted decrease in JAK2 among non‐smokers, which was significant at 12 and 18 months (p < 0.01). Among JAK2‐positive patients, 13/14 (93%) smokers received r‐IFNα vs. 63/83 (76%) non‐smokers, but this did not affect the model. Neither did age, sex, baseline JAK2 or diagnosis. A partial molecular response was achieved in 4/14 (28.6%) smokers vs. 32/83 (38.6%) non‐smokers and a complete clinicohematological response was achieved in 14/23 (60.9%) smokers vs. 80/117 (68.4%) non‐smokers. A drop‐out rate of 15/23 (65.2%) among smokers and 59/117 (50.4%) among non‐smokers lead to wider 95% CI with time (Figure 1).Summary/Conclusion:Non‐smokers are more likely to have a more rapid decrease in JAK2 particularly in the initial phase of treatment (12 and 18 months, p < 0.01) compared to smokers. Although statistical testing was not performed, partial molecular response and complete clinicohematological response were more incident among non‐smokers and drop‐out was lower among non‐smokers. The study was limited by several factors: (1) The post‐hoc design. (2) The few smokers. (3) Smoking status might change in relation to a diagnosis of MPN, thus rendering the initial grouping unprecise. (4) The study design was not powered to detect factors affecting the model. Still, the resulting model was rather conservative. Hence the finding was surprising, and it needs confirmation in additional studies.image

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call