Clinicians can reassure myelofibrosis patients that the drop in hemoglobin often seen when starting ruxolitinib does not carry the same negative prognostic weight as anemia caused by the disease itself. This distinction is crucial for managing patient expectations and continuing effective therapy despite initial side effects.

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A diagnosis of myelofibrosis without a JAK2, CALR, or MPL mutation should be treated as a red flag, not a final diagnosis. It warrants a deeper investigation for alternative causes, such as MDS/MPN overlap syndromes or secondary fibrosis from other conditions like autoimmune disease or hairy cell leukemia.

While beneficial for patients with prior weight loss, ruxolitinib can cause significant weight gain (20-30 pounds) in other myelofibrosis patients. This quality-of-life issue should be discussed proactively, as it can become a major concern, effectively trading one disease state for another.

For myelofibrosis patients with profound splenomegaly but only moderate thrombocytopenia (platelets 50k-100k), fedratinib may be the best frontline option. It is arguably the most potent JAK inhibitor for spleen reduction and is approved for use in patients with platelet counts as low as 50,000.

When debating immunotherapy risks, clinicians separate manageable side effects from truly life-altering events. Hypothyroidism requiring a daily pill is deemed acceptable, whereas toxicities like diabetes or myocarditis (each ~1% risk) are viewed as major concerns that heavily weigh on the risk-benefit scale for early-stage disease.

To combat the significant myelosuppression from the standard 28-day venetoclax cycle in AML, many clinicians are adopting a strategy of performing a bone marrow biopsy around day 21 and pausing the drug if blast clearance is achieved to allow for hematologic recovery.

While these drugs can cause neutropenia, it rarely leads to infections. Patients often feel clinically well despite low neutrophil counts. This 'paper problem' can usually be managed with G-CSF without needing to dose-reduce the primary CLL therapy.

A critical distinction exists between a clinical adverse event (AE) and its impact on a patient's quality of life (QOL). For example, a drop in platelet count is a reportable AE, but the patient may be asymptomatic and feel fine. This highlights the need to look beyond toxicity tables to understand the true patient experience.

While rereading pathology reports is always good practice, it provides the most clinical value in cases of suspected ET. These patients are frequently reclassified as having prefibrotic myelofibrosis, a diagnosis that significantly alters patient counseling, prognosis, and long-term management strategies.

For myelofibrosis patients with both anemia and splenomegaly, a practical approach is to start with ruxolitinib for its superior symptom control. If the subsequent anemia is not well-tolerated, switching to momelotinib allows for a more informed, personalized decision based on the patient's experience with both agents.

Recurrent non-melanoma skin cancers in patients on ruxolitinib may be attributable to its JAK1 inhibition. In such cases, a viable strategy is to switch the patient to a more JAK2-selective inhibitor, such as pacritinib or fedratinib, to potentially mitigate this specific side effect while maintaining disease control.