Essential Thrombocythemia (ET) and Polycythemia Vera (PV) Symptom Burden: Phenotypic Cluster Analysis Among an International Sample of 1,141 ET and PV Patients

Abstract 1726 We previously reported that symptom burden among persons with ET and PV can be severe and adversely affect QOL. The presence of severe symptoms is linked to poor prognosis. There is considerable inter-subject heterogeneity regarding which symptoms are present in which subjects. No stud...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2012-11, Vol.120 (21), p.1726-1726
Hauptverfasser: Emanuel, Robyn M., Dueck, Amylou C., Geyer, Holly Lynn, Kiladjian, Jean-Jacques, Slot, Stefanie, Zweegman, Sonja, te Boekhorst, Peter, Commandeur, Suzan, Schouten, Harry C, Sackmann, Federico, Fuentes, Ana Kerguelen, Hernandez, Dolores, Pahl, Heike L., Griesshammer, Martin, Stegelmann, Frank, Doehner, Konstanze, Lehmann, Thomas, Bonatz, Karin, Reiter, Andreas, Boyer, Françoise, Etienne, Gabriel, Ianotto, Jean-Christophe, Ranta, Dana, Roy, Lydia, Cahn, Jean-Yves, Harrison, Claire N, Radia, Deepti H, Muxi, Pablo J., Maldonado, Norman I, Besses, Carlos, Cervantes, Francisco, Johansson, Peter, Barbui, Tiziano, Barosi, Giovanni, Vannucchi, Alessandro M., Passamonti, Francesco, Andreasson, Bjorn, Ferarri, Maria L, Rambaldi, Alessandro, Birgegard, Gunnar, Xiao, Zhijian, Xu, Zefeng, Zhang, Yue, Sun, Xiujuan, Xu, Junqing, Zhang, Peihong, Gale, Robert Peter, Tefferi, Ayalew, Mesa, Ruben A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract 1726 We previously reported that symptom burden among persons with ET and PV can be severe and adversely affect QOL. The presence of severe symptoms is linked to poor prognosis. There is considerable inter-subject heterogeneity regarding which symptoms are present in which subjects. No studies have empirically evaluated whether disease characteristics can be grouped in related symptom clusters. Using our previously validated 18 item Myeloproliferative Neoplasm Assessment Form (MPN-SAF) (Blood 2011;118:401–408) given in conjunction with the 9 item Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI) (Cancer 1999;85:1186–1196), we sought to evaluate symptom burden by means of cluster analysis. Data was collected from an international cohort of subjects with MPNs including demographics, disease features and the completed BFI and MPN-SAF instruments. Surveyed symptoms included fatigue, early satiety, abdominal pain and discomfort, inactivity, headaches, concentration, dizziness, extremity tingling, insomnia, sexual difficulties, mood changes, cough, night sweats, pruritus, bone pain and fever on a 0 (absent) to 10 (worst-imaginable) scale. Development of symptom clusters was based on consideration of r-squared in hierarchical clustering using Ward linkage. Final cluster assignment was based on the nonhierarchical k-means method. Comparisons between symptom clusters were based on ANOVA and chi-squared tests. Results: Data from 1,141 subjects with PV (N=519) and ET (N=622) was prospectively collected (Chinese 236, French 305, German 45, Italian 114, Dutch 191, English 56, Spanish 109, Swedish 85. Age (mean 59, range, 26–87) and gender (54% F) were typical. Five clusters were selected (Figure 1). Frequencies of prior bleeding, spleen size, anemia, presence of any lab abnormality, language, gender, and MPN type varied significantly between clusters (P
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood.V120.21.1726.1726