Thalidomide treatment in a myelofibrosis patient with leukemia transformation
Resource
Int. J. Hematol., 99(2), 188-192
Journal
International Journal of Hematology
Pages
188-192
Date Issued
2014
Date
2014
Author(s)
Huang, Wei-Han
Li, Ming-Shing
Chu, Sung-Chao
Wang, Tso-Fu
Kao, Ruey-Ho
Wu, Yi-Feng
Abstract
Primary myelofibrosis is a clonal disease of chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm, and is a progressive clinical course with short median survival of less than 5 years after diagnosis. Leukemic transformation occurs in 8-23 % of myelofibrosis patients, and survival is about 3 months after transformation to leukemia. Thalidomide, an oral immunomodulatory drug, has been used effectively in the treatment of primary myelofibrosis, in which some patients could become transfusion independent, and showed improvement in thrombocytopenia and reduction in spleen size. Here, we report a patient with primary myelofibrosis with leukemic transformation who survived for more than 6 years with thalidomide monotherapy. Thalidomide may be beneficial for some myelofibrosis patients with leukemic transformation for whom intensive chemotherapy is not indicated.
Subjects
Myelofibrosis
Acute leukemia
Thalidomide
JAK2
SDGs
Other Subjects
Adult; Angiogenesis Inhibitors; Bone Marrow; Cell Transformation, Neoplastic; Drug Resistance, Neoplasm; Humans; Immunosuppressive Agents; Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute; Male; Primary Myelofibrosis; Remission Induction; Thalidomide; Treatment Outcome