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Real-world outcomes with fedratinib therapy in patients who discontinued ruxolitinib for primary myelofibrosis.

Francesco PassamontiYoubei LouManoj ChevliPranav Abraham
Published in: Future oncology (London, England) (2023)
Aim: Fedratinib is an oral selective JAK2 inhibitor approved in the USA for the treatment of adult patients with intermediate-2 or high-risk primary or secondary myelofibrosis (MF). Methods: This observational study assessed adult US patients who received ruxolitinib for primary MF (Flatiron Health database: 1 January 2011-31 October 2020). Patients were stratified by post-ruxolitinib treatment (fedratinib vs non-fedratinib). Results: Characteristics were comparable between fedratinib (n=70) and non-fedratinib (n=159) groups (median age: 71.0 vs 70.0 years; females: 55.7 vs 50.3%; median follow-up: 7.0 vs 6.0 months). Median overall survival (not reached vs 17 months) and 12 month survival (71.6 vs 53.5%) were improved with fedratinib versus the non-fedratinib therapies. Conclusion: In MF patients who received frontline ruxolitinib, survival was improved with subsequent fedratinib versus non-fedratinib care.
Keyphrases
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