Cardiotoxicity of Anti-Cancer Radiation Therapy: a Focus on Heart Failure.
Alex RitterCooper QuartermaineJovan Pierre-CharlesSuryakumar BalasubramanianPejman Raeisi-GiglouDaniel AddisonEric D MillerPublished in: Current heart failure reports (2023)
Despite its relative lack of study historically, radiation-induced heart failure has now recently been implicated in several studies of breast cancer, lung cancer, esophageal cancer, and lymphoma as a non-trivial potential consequence of thoracic radiotherapy. Data regarding specific cardiac dosimetric endpoints relevant to cardiotoxicity continue to accumulate. Radiation-induced heart failure is a rare but significant toxicity of thoracic radiotherapy, that is likely underreported. Important areas for future focus include understanding the interplay between thoracic radiotherapy and concurrent cardiotoxic systemic therapy as well as development of potential mitigation strategies and novel therapeutics.
Keyphrases
- radiation induced
- radiation therapy
- heart failure
- locally advanced
- spinal cord
- left ventricular
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- atrial fibrillation
- climate change
- electronic health record
- human health
- stem cells
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- big data
- small molecule
- spinal cord injury
- risk assessment
- machine learning
- bone marrow
- young adults
- rectal cancer
- drug induced
- smoking cessation