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Update: Ruxolitinib Beats Best Available Therapy in Treating Polycythemia Vera

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Investigators added more data to an analysis first published in 2020 and got the same result: ruxolitinib beats other treatments for polycythemia vera.

An updated meta-analysis confirms that ruxolitinib, the Janus kinase (JAK) 1/JAK2 inhibitor sold as Jakafi, offers improvements in key measures of efficacy compared with best available therapy (BAT) for patients with polycythemia vera (PV),1 a rare, slow-progressing disorder that causes the blood to make too many red blood cells.

Caused by a genetic mutation, PV is not typically fatal on its own, but it can cause dangerous blood clots and damage to the spleen. In a small number of cases, it progresses to more aggressive forms of blood cancer.

The latest results were reported in the journal APMIS,1 formerly known as Acta Pathologica, Microbiologica, et Immunologica Scandinavica.

The analysis followed a 2020 meta-analysis involving 16 studies that appeared in Blood Advances.2 That analysis included evidence from 4 randomized controlled trials and included 663 patients; the authors estimated a thrombosis incidence of 3.09% per year for ruxolitinib vs 5.51% for BAT, but noted that globally, this did not reach significance (P = .098). “A clinical trial on selected patients at high risk of thrombosis would be warranted, but its feasibility is questionable,” the authors wrote.2

The current analysis examines ruxolitinib’s efficacy and safety compared BAT in 1061 patients with PV and in hydroxyurea-resistant and intolerant patients with PV across 6 studies, with a cutoff of November 2023. The patients included 620 on BAT and 441 on ruxolitinib. According to the investigators:

  • Those taking ruxolitinib showed higher hematocrit control (P = .015) and treatment response (P = .04) compared to BAT.
  • Patients taking ruxolitinib had significantly improved Myeloproliferative Neoplasms-Symptom Assessment Form scores (MPN-SAF), P < .01.

However, on the safety front, patients with PV treated with ruxolitinib had higher rates of nonmelanoma skin cancer (P < .01), as has been previously documented.

Subgroup analyses that detailed results for those patients who were resistant or intolerant to hydroxyurea showed that ruxolitinib maintained its efficacy; the therapy significantly improved responses (P < .01) and also demonstrated improvements in the MPN-SAF (P = 0.02) score when compared to BAT.

Investigators reported that the safety findings were consistent with the overall results:

  • Ruxolitinib showed significantly reduced thromboembolism rates (P = .04)
  • Investigators reported increased rates of anemia (P = .01), and increased herpes zoster infections (P = .02)

Investigators concluded, “Ruxolitinib outperforms BAT in PV and patients with PV-resistant or intolerant to hydroxyurea, offering better hematocrit control and reducing symptomatic burden and thromboembolism risk. Yet, it is associated with higher rates of anemia, herpes infection, and skin cancer.”1

References

  1. Mora MMR, Afzal F, Guimaraes CR, et al. Efficacy and safety of ruxolitinib vs best available therapy for polycythemia vera: An updated systematic review and meta-analysis. APMIS. Published online October 8, 2024. doi: 10.1111/apm.13472.
  2. Masciulli A, Ferrari A, Carobbio A, Ghirardi A, Barbui T. Ruxolitinib for the prevention of thrombosis in polycythemia vera: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Blood Adv. 2020;4(2):380-386. doi: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2019001158.
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