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      Anthropometric, medical history and lifestyle risk factors for myeloproliferative neoplasms in the Iowa Women's Health Study cohort.

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          Abstract

          Classical myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) are composed of essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV) and myelofibrosis (MF), the etiology of which is largely unknown. We investigated the role of anthropometric, medical and lifestyle factors with risk of MPN in a prospective cohort of 27,370 women aged 55-69 years at enrollment. After >250,000 person-years of follow-up, 257 cases of MPN were identified (172 ET, 64 PV, 21 MF). Risk factor profiles were mostly unique for the two most common types, ET and PV. ET was associated with energy balance factors including body mass index (RR = 1.52 for >29.3 vs. <23.4 kg/m(2) ; p-trend = 0.042), physical activity (RR = 0.66 for high vs. low; p-trend = 0.04) and adult onset diabetes (RR = 1.82; p = 0.009), while PV was not. PV was associated with current smoking (RR = 2.83; p-trend = 0.016), while ET was not. Regular use of aspirin was associated with lower risk of ET (RR = 0.68; p = 0.017). These results broadly held in multivariate models. Our results suggest distinct etiologies for these MPN subtypes and raise mechanistic hypotheses related to obesity-related inflammatory pathways for ET and smoking-related carcinogenic pathways for PV. Regular aspirin use may lower risk for ET.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Int. J. Cancer
          International journal of cancer
          Wiley
          1097-0215
          0020-7136
          Apr 01 2014
          : 134
          : 7
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
          Article
          NIHMS529172
          10.1002/ijc.28492
          3947165
          24114627
          62f6aee0-f348-4521-a9bc-2a445d1572de
          History

          myeloproliferative neoplasm,lifestyle,polycythemia vera,risk factor,essential thrombocythemia

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