Perspectives on chronic inflammation in essential thrombocythemia, polycythemia vera, and myelofibrosis: is chronic inflammation a trigger and driver of clonal evolution and development of accelerated atherosclerosis and second cancer?

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

The morbidity and mortality of patients with the chronic Philadelphia-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), essential thrombocythemia, polycythemia vera, and primary myelofibrosis are mainly caused by cardiovascular diseases, thrombohemorrhagic complications, and bone marrow failure because of myelofibrosis and leukemic transformation. In the general population, chronic inflammation is considered of major importance for the development of atherosclerosis and cancer. MPNs are characterized by a state of chronic inflammation, which is proposed to be the common denominator for the development of "premature atherosclerosis," clonal evolution, and second cancer in patients with MPNs. Chronic inflammation may both initiate clonal evolution and catalyze its expansion from early disease stage to the myelofibrotic burnt-out phase. Furthermore, chronic inflammation may also add to the severity of cardiovascular disease burden by accelerating the development of atherosclerosis, which is well described and recognized in other chronic inflammatory diseases. A link between chronic inflammation, atherosclerosis, and second cancer in MPNs favors early intervention at the time of diagnosis (statins and interferon-α2), the aims being to dampen chronic inflammation and clonal evolution and thereby also diminish concurrent disease-mediated chronic inflammation and its consequences (accelerated atherosclerosis and second cancer).

Original languageEnglish
JournalBlood
Volume119
Issue number14
Pages (from-to)3219-25
Number of pages7
ISSN0006-4971
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Apr 2012

    Research areas

  • Atherosclerosis, Autoimmunity, Bone Marrow Neoplasms, Chronic Disease, Clonal Evolution, Diabetes Mellitus, Disease Progression, Humans, Hyperuricemia, Inflammation, Insulin Resistance, Kidney Diseases, Monocytes, Morbidity, NF-kappa B, Polycythemia Vera, Primary Myelofibrosis, Signal Transduction, Thrombocythemia, Essential

ID: 120839842