Essential thrombocythemia (ET): When to start hydroxyurea (HU)?

Posted by anavleek @anavleek, Apr 9 10:58pm

I was just diagnosed with ET. I am 61 years old. My platelet count is 640k right now.
Doctor suggested I take a baby aspirin everyday and HU. I am hesitant about taking HU. I have heard of doctors waiting till the platelet count is higher to take HU.
Any insight? How bad is HU for your body, I was reading it can cause cancer too.
Thank you

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I have been on HU since February at 500 HU daily and then increased it in April to 1000HU daily after testing positive for CALR. The HU actually made me feel better. The aches in my body went away, night sweats were reduced and my energy level improved. I have had no hair loss, but my skin is very dry. I also find I am more lactose intolerant and Morse sensitive to the sun. 2 weeks ago I got an infection after teeth cleaning and my white and red blood cells dropped and my platelets are starting to rise so they reduced the dosage to 500 HU daily from 1000. I am also on a low dose aspirin. I personally find the HU very helpful and because I tested positive for the Calr gene I am hoping the HU prevents it from becoming leukemia. I am 73 and stay active by biking, working out at the gym and riding my horse. I also have 3 grandchildren that keep me moving. My PCP feels that staying active is important.

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Profile picture for nypara66 @nypara66

It can but it’s just a slight amount. My guess is he will start you on seven days a week and you’ll wind up on 3 or 5X a week to maintain. You will see results within the first month. Two months lowered mine 250 points. Good luck!

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Congratulations on the rapid lowering of your platelet count, nypara66!

Not everyone is so lucky, though. For me, it's taken two years of HU to bring my count down from the 700s to the 400s.

So to those starting on HU, don't expect miracles. Just know that every dose is protecting your bone marrow and reducing your chance of cardiac issues.

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Profile picture for nypara66 @nypara66

It can but it’s just a slight amount. My guess is he will start you on seven days a week and you’ll wind up on 3 or 5X a week to maintain. You will see results within the first month. Two months lowered mine 250 points. Good luck!

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Thank you!

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Profile picture for cec2 @cec2

Best wishes for your upcoming appointment, edriels.

I too have the JAK2 gene mutation. I have no symptoms and was diagnosed in April. I've only seen the specialist one time, and because I'm over 60 (age 78) he said I was high risk for blood clots that can cause strokes and heart attacks, which is the big danger with ET. He put me on one low-dose (81mg) aspirin a day to make the platelets more slippery and less likely to form clots. He said he would prescribe HU (Hydrea) to reduce my platelet count if my count got above 600k, which it most likely will as it's been increasing steadily and was 581k last time.

I've read that some doctors don't prescribe meds until the count is higher but that's what he said for me. I guess every patient is different.

He said they don't know what causes the gene mutation, that ET is not hereditary, I wasn't born with it and did nothing to cause it, and they don't know how to prevent it or cure it, but it can be managed.

From all the reading I've done on well respected websites, HU is usually the first med they use for people our age with ET, if they think meds are needed. It seems to be the one most people can tolerate and it may be the safest one as well. I am wary of taking it (or any meds actually) but I will if he says I should, because I don't want to have a stroke or heart attack from blood clots.

My oncologist/hematologist was very optimistic with me, and says he prefers to call ET a "blood disorder," although it is technically a form of blood cancer. But it's not the kind of cancer that's invasive or spreads to other organs. It's a cancer because too many cells are produced. The main danger is blood clots, although in a very small percentage of cases it can progress to something worse, but that isn't common. He said HU is a chemo drug but not one that has bad side effects for most people. It said it doesn't make you throw up or lose your hair. He was very reassuring to me. From what I've read life expectancy is about the same for people with ET who are treated as it is for other people.

I'm not a medical person but am sharing what I was recently told by my specialist so you'll know some things your doctor may tell you. You might already know it. Prayers and good wishes for a good outcome for us all.

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Actually, it depends on the person. HU made me lose hair and vomit. My hair was coming out in clumps. After I started taking Essential Amino Acids (Doublewood brand), my hair stopped falling out and grew back in, albeit a little fuzzy now. HU also affects my digestion, including nausea and vomiting. I take some supplements and herbs to help counteract that side effect. Here’s the reason why. Chemo targets rapidly dividing cells, which is why HU works so well for ET. My high blood count stays under control with the med. But hair follicles and mucous membranes are also rapidly dividing cells, thus the hair loss for some people. Chemo degrades the mucosal barrier of the digestive system, given that it is made up of mucous membranes. Some people are not affected at all, but I am so I take a few things to help in that area, and I have to continually keep Candida albicans overgrowth in check. Mouth sores is another side effect of chemo, because of mucous membranes in the mouth. I was getting just one at a time, then I read on here the recommendation to use a zinc mouth wash. I opted for zinc lozenges which I suck on once or twice per day, and no more mouth sores. It’s so different for everyone, and I hope for the best for you on your journey.

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Profile picture for didyolsn @didyolsn

Actually, it depends on the person. HU made me lose hair and vomit. My hair was coming out in clumps. After I started taking Essential Amino Acids (Doublewood brand), my hair stopped falling out and grew back in, albeit a little fuzzy now. HU also affects my digestion, including nausea and vomiting. I take some supplements and herbs to help counteract that side effect. Here’s the reason why. Chemo targets rapidly dividing cells, which is why HU works so well for ET. My high blood count stays under control with the med. But hair follicles and mucous membranes are also rapidly dividing cells, thus the hair loss for some people. Chemo degrades the mucosal barrier of the digestive system, given that it is made up of mucous membranes. Some people are not affected at all, but I am so I take a few things to help in that area, and I have to continually keep Candida albicans overgrowth in check. Mouth sores is another side effect of chemo, because of mucous membranes in the mouth. I was getting just one at a time, then I read on here the recommendation to use a zinc mouth wash. I opted for zinc lozenges which I suck on once or twice per day, and no more mouth sores. It’s so different for everyone, and I hope for the best for you on your journey.

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Thank you for that helpful info, and I'm sorry you have bad side effects. I'm noting the products that people are using to help them. I hope the best for you, too.

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Profile picture for cec2 @cec2

Thanks for the replies!

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I have been on HU for ET for 11 years. I am 81 years old and active. My blood counts have been very good. I see my hematologist every 3 months and no longer worry about strokes. FYI I have a full head of hair.

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Profile picture for biddypoppop @biddypoppop

I have been on HU for ET for 11 years. I am 81 years old and active. My blood counts have been very good. I see my hematologist every 3 months and no longer worry about strokes. FYI I have a full head of hair.

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How wonderful to hear! Thank you for sharing that and best wishes for continuing good health.

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Profile picture for nypara66 @nypara66

It can but it’s just a slight amount. My guess is he will start you on seven days a week and you’ll wind up on 3 or 5X a week to maintain. You will see results within the first month. Two months lowered mine 250 points. Good luck!

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Does anyone else have any experience with higher doses of HU? I am on 1500 daily and have hair shedding, nausea, headaches and fatigue. My white cells are so low I am living like it is the pandemic. I am 55 diagnosed in November 24 and started HU in June. My platelets are only slowly decreasing and now at 600. I am hoping to hear my dosage will be going down sooner than later.

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Profile picture for deanbears @deanbears

Does anyone else have any experience with higher doses of HU? I am on 1500 daily and have hair shedding, nausea, headaches and fatigue. My white cells are so low I am living like it is the pandemic. I am 55 diagnosed in November 24 and started HU in June. My platelets are only slowly decreasing and now at 600. I am hoping to hear my dosage will be going down sooner than later.

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Yes, some docs start patients on huge doses of HU if their platelets are over 1,000 and they are at higher clot risk due to age (over 60), if you've had a clot, and driver mutation (JAK2 = more clot proclivity).

Most docs now are starting with low doses and moving up as needed. Gives patients time to adjust to the med.

Imo, it would not be at all out of line to call the doc and ask if you can reduce your dose gradually to alleviate symptoms or to seek a second opinion. The treatment for chronic illness should should not be worse than the disease.

But ET is diff for everyone. I'd be interested in knowing more about yr doc's dosing strategy.

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Profile picture for deanbears @deanbears

Does anyone else have any experience with higher doses of HU? I am on 1500 daily and have hair shedding, nausea, headaches and fatigue. My white cells are so low I am living like it is the pandemic. I am 55 diagnosed in November 24 and started HU in June. My platelets are only slowly decreasing and now at 600. I am hoping to hear my dosage will be going down sooner than later.

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Wow seems like a really high dose to start. I was on HU for over 5 years, started out at 500 mg 3X/wk. Over time platelets would creep up, so upped the dose until 2000 mg 3 days a week and 1500 the other 4. Never had issues until all off a sudden all parameters cratered (plt, rbc, wbc) now on Jakafi 10 mg 2X / d.

As you can see from the posts, very few have the same journey, so monitor yourself and trust your doc (second opinions are also highly recommended especially if not an MPN specialist), I've been lucky to have always had a great doc - only switched to one in an R&D institution to have opportunities to participate in clinical trials.
Best of luck.

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