Understanding Hematocrit Thresholds in Polycythemia Vera Treatment

March 19, 2025

Author(s): Maggie L. Shaw, Andrew Kuykendall, MD

In early March, The American Journal of Managed Care® spoke with Andrew Kuykendall, MD, a clinical researcher at Moffitt Cancer Center who focuses on myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), myelodysplastic syndrome/MPN overlap syndromes, and systemic mastocytosis. Kuykendall is an investigator on the phase 3 VERIFY trial (NCT05210790) of the injectable hepcidin mimetic rusfertide (Takeda) to treat polycythemia vera (PV) by enabling patients to achieve and sustain hematocrit control.1 Hematocrit is the measure of the percentage of red blood cells in the body.2

Treatment guidelines in PV currently recommend maintaining hematocrit below 45%, with a higher threshold for men vs women.2 For part 2 of this interview, Kuykendall explains the reasoning behind having different hematocrit thresholds.

In the first part of the interview, Kuykendall discussed how PV manifests and common ways to reduce its negative impact on patient quality of life.

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Posted in Polycythemia Vera, Treatment and tagged , , , .

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