Abstract

This article, by two of the late John H. Lawrence's fellows of the 1940s, traces the development of the knowledge of polycythemia vera from Vaquez, who wrote the first description of this disease, and Osler, who recognized it as “a new clinical entity,” through John H. Lawrence and the use of 32P as a treatment for polycythemia vera, to the formation of French and Italian polycythemia study groups. In particular, the history of polycythemia vera after the Second World War, and its more recent history, can be traced through the development of an algorithm for evaluating an elevated hematocrit and the development of the first (01) protocol of the Polycythemia Vera Study Group (PVSG), a randomized trial of the efficacy of 32P, chlorambucil, and phlebotomy for treating polycythemia vera. It was in 1948, only 9 years after the first use of 32P for treating polycythemia vera, that Byron Hall reported the occurrence of acute leukemia following this use of the isotope. This led to the formation of the PVSG. After completing enrollment of patients in the first protocol of the PVSG, an attempt to find a replacement for 32P as a myelosuppressive agent led to the testing of hydroxyurea as a putative non-leukemogenic drug for this purpose. However, the use of hydroxyurea for treating polycythemia vera is coming into question, as is the ability to maintain patients with phlebotomy alone. The PVSG as such no longer exists as an operational group; its files are maintained at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City. However, the French group created for the study of polycythemia vera has had a consensus conference, and the Italian group has developed a low-dose aspirin protocol for treating the disease.

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