Cancer therapy-induced cardiovascular toxicity: old/new problems and old drugs.
Andreas M BeyerMarcelo G BoniniJavid MoslehiPublished in: American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology (2019)
Cardio-oncology has emerged as an exciting new field at the intersection of cardiology and oncology. While improved oncology treatment efficacy has increased survival rates in cancer patients, the long-term cardiovascular consequences of this life-saving treatment have become more clinically relevant. Both traditional and newer (targeted) cancer therapies can have cardiovascular and metabolic sequelae, resulting in heart failure, coronary artery disease, myocarditis, pericardial disease, hypertension, and vascular and metabolic perturbations (Moslehi JJ. Cardiovascular toxic effects of targeted cancer therapies. N Engl J Med 375: 1457-1467, 2016). Both acute and chronic cardiovascular toxicities have proven challenging for clinicians and patients, significantly contributing to morbidity and mortality. Although chronic cardiovascular disease affects a growing number of cancer survivors (~17 million in the United States in 2019), cardiovascular toxicities associated with cancer and cancer therapies are poorly understood mechanistically. To balance potential damage to the cardiovascular system with effective and efficient cancer treatment, novel strategies are sorely needed. This perspective focuses on an assembly of articles that discuss novel means of counteracting adverse cardiovascular events in response to anticancer therapy. In light of new clinical syndromes in cardiology due to cancer therapies, we hope to highlight promising research opportunities offered by cardio-oncology (Bellinger AM, Arteaga CL, Force T, Humphreys BD, Demetri GD, Druker BJ, Moslehi JJ. Cardio-oncology: how new targeted cancer therapies and precision medicine can inform cardiovascular discovery. Circulation 132: 2248-2258, 2015.).
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular disease
- cardiovascular events
- heart failure
- cancer therapy
- palliative care
- squamous cell
- lymph node metastasis
- childhood cancer
- blood pressure
- metabolic syndrome
- end stage renal disease
- drug induced
- mental health
- chronic kidney disease
- risk assessment
- acute kidney injury
- newly diagnosed
- hepatitis b virus
- smoking cessation
- high glucose
- intensive care unit
- single molecule
- single cell
- patient reported