Edward Pearson, MD, is a board certified in internal medicine and specializes in medical oncology and hematology at Texas Oncology.
Evolving Management Strategies for Phlebotomy-Dependent Polycythemia Vera: The Path Forward
June 4th 2025Panelists discuss how new treatments like rusfertide (a hepcidin mimetic) offer promising options for polycythemia vera patients, demonstrating benefits in reducing phlebotomy requirements while addressing the paradoxical iron deficiency caused by current treatments, potentially improving quality of life while allowing patients to maintain their existing cytoreductive therapies, though questions remain about whether it will show the disease-modifying effects seen with ruxolitinib and interferons.
Clinical Impact of PROUD-PV/CONTINUATION-PV Trials on Polycythemia Vera Treatment Decision-Making
June 4th 2025Panelists discuss how interferon therapy for polycythemia vera requires patient education about its unique characteristics, including the need for long-term treatment (with benefits most apparent at 36 months rather than 12 months), potential adverse effects (mild flu-like symptoms, depression, injection site reactions, and autoimmune issues), and evolving dosing strategies that may improve tolerability, while emphasizing that with FDA approval of ropeginterferon, insurance hurdles have decreased and molecular response monitoring may eventually guide treatment optimization.
MAJIC-PV Trial Outcomes: Guiding Treatment Decisions for Hydroxyurea-Resistant Polycythemia Vera
May 28th 2025Panelists discuss how the MAJIC-PV trial provides critical evidence that ruxolitinib offers more than symptomatic relief in polycythemia vera, demonstrating approximately 40% reduction in thromboembolic events and improved event-free survival while correlating these clinical benefits with molecular responses through JAK2 V617F allele burden reduction, suggesting ruxolitinib may be truly disease-modifying rather than merely a bandage treatment when comprehensive control of all 3 blood cell lineages (red cells, white cells, and platelets) is achieved.
RESPONSE Trial Findings: Managing Polycythemia Vera in Hydroxyurea-Inadequate Responders
May 28th 2025Panelists discuss how ruxolitinib provides comprehensive benefits for polycythemia vera patients beyond count control, highlighting its remarkable ability to rapidly alleviate severe pruritus (often within 48 hours) and other constitutional symptoms that remain resistant to conventional therapies like hydroxyurea and interferon while also effectively managing cytokine-driven and spleen-related symptoms that significantly impact quality of life.
CYTO-PV Trial Insights: Optimizing Hematocrit Targets and Thrombosis Prevention in Polycythemia Vera
May 21st 2025Panelists discuss how the CYTO-PV study provides compelling evidence for maintaining strict hematocrit control below 45% in polycythemia vera patients, demonstrating that even a 3% difference in hematocrit levels can lead to a fourfold increase in cardiovascular events and thrombosis risk while also emphasizing the independent importance of controlling white blood cell counts below 11 × 109/L to further reduce thrombotic complications.
Case-Based Discussion: Management Strategies for Hydroxyurea-Resistant Polycythemia Vera
May 14th 2025Panelists discuss how managing advanced polycythemia vera requires tailored approaches beyond hydroxyurea when patients show resistance (persistent hematocrit >45%, elevated white blood cell counts, ongoing symptoms), with experts advocating for either second-line ruxolitinib for rapid symptom and hematologic control or interferons (particularly in younger patients), while emphasizing the importance of addressing modifiable cardiovascular risk factors like smoking cessation.
MOMENTUM Trial Outcomes: Guiding Therapy for Myelofibrosis With Anemia and Splenomegaly
May 7th 2025Panelists discuss how the MOMENTUM trial demonstrated momelotinib’s superiority over danazol in symptomatic anemic myelofibrosis patients, showing significant improvements in symptoms (the primary end point), meaningful spleen volume reduction (SVR25/SVR35), and anemia benefits, with experts noting that the inclusion of a washout period provided clearer evidence of momelotinib’s efficacy profile compared to the SIMPLIFY-2 trial.
COMFORT Trials: Applying Evidence to Intermediate-Risk Myelofibrosis
April 23rd 2025Panelists discuss how clinical trial data from the COMFORT studies supports using Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors such as ruxolitinib for myelofibrosis patients beyond the original high-risk study population, with experts noting they often treat intermediate-1-risk patients based on symptomatic burden and splenomegaly rather than risk stratification alone to achieve meaningful spleen volume reduction and symptom improvement.
Myelofibrosis Management: Clinical Approaches and Treatment Algorithms With Case-Based Application
April 23rd 2025Panelists discuss how treatment goals for intermediate-risk myelofibrosis patients focus on achieving meaningful clinical outcomes including relieving symptoms, preventing worsening of anemia, maintaining transfusion independence, reducing symptomatic splenomegaly, and ultimately improving survival while considering patient-specific factors like age and transplant eligibility.