Clinical Investigation
V617F JAK-2 mutation in patients with essential thrombocythemia: relation to platelet, granulocyte, and plasma hemostatic and inflammatory molecules

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.exphem.2007.01.053Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Objective

This article evaluates patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) to determine whether the V617F mutation in the JAK2 gene affects platelet hemostatic and adhesive molecules, platelet-polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) interactions, and PMN-activation characteristics, as well as plasma hypercoagulation markers.

Patients and Methods

Thirty-seven ET patients with V617F JAK2 mutation and 38 wild-type, and 50 healthy controls were studied.

Results

Platelets from overall ET patients, compared to controls, expressed significantly higher membrane tissue factor (TF) and P-selectin (p < 0.01) and lower CD41 and CD42b (p < 0.01). TF appeared significantly higher in the V617F JAK2 carriers compared to wild-type, and total platelet TF antigen levels confirmed the same result. The presence of circulating platelet/PMN aggregates was significantly greater in the JAK2-mutation carriers than in the wild-type and controls (p < 0.05). PMN surface activation and inflammatory markers (i.e., CD14, TF, CD11b, and leukocyte alkaline phosphatase [LAP]) were all significantly higher in ET versus control subjects, with CD14 and LAP being the highest in the JAK2 mutation carriers. Finally, a significant increase in plasma hypercoagulation markers was found in ET patients, and the only difference for the V617F JAK2 carriers was higher plasma thrombomodulin levels (p < 0.01). Differences in white blood cell and PMN count, platelet TF, PMN CD14, and LAP, and plasma thrombomodulin remained significant after multivariate analysis.

Conclusions

These results show that a correlation exists between the presence of V617F JAK2 mutation and selected hemostatic activation variables.

Cited by (0)