Established and Emerging Cancer Therapies and Cardiovascular System: Focus on Hypertension-Mechanisms and Mitigation.
Lloyd E Butel-SimoesTatt Jhong HawTrent WilliamsShanathan SritharanPayal GadreSandra M HerrmannJoerg HerrmannDoan T M NgoAaron L SverdlovPublished in: Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. : 1979) (2023)
Cardiovascular disease and cancer are 2 of the leading causes of death worldwide. Although improvements in outcomes have been noted for both disease entities, the success of cancer therapies has come at the cost of at times very impactful adverse events such as cardiovascular events. Hypertension has been noted as both, a side effect as well as a risk factor for the cardiotoxicity of cancer therapies. Some of these dynamics are in keeping with the role of hypertension as a cardiovascular risk factor not only for heart failure, but also for the development of coronary and cerebrovascular disease, and kidney disease and its association with a higher morbidity and mortality overall. Other aspects such as the molecular mechanisms underlying the amplification of acute and long-term cardiotoxicity risk of anthracyclines and increase in blood pressure with various cancer therapeutics remain to be elucidated. In this review, we cover the latest clinical data regarding the risk of hypertension across a spectrum of novel anticancer therapies as well as the underlying known or postulated pathophysiological mechanisms. Furthermore, we review the acute and long-term implications for the amplification of the development of cardiotoxicity with drugs not commonly associated with hypertension such as anthracyclines. An outline of management strategies, including pharmacological and lifestyle interventions as well as models of care aimed to facilitate early detection and more timely management of hypertension in patients with cancer and survivors concludes this review, which overall aims to improve both cardiovascular and cancer-specific outcomes.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- papillary thyroid
- cardiovascular disease
- squamous cell
- heart failure
- cardiovascular events
- healthcare
- coronary artery disease
- physical activity
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- childhood cancer
- lymph node metastasis
- hypertensive patients
- risk factors
- liver failure
- young adults
- heart rate
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small molecule
- skeletal muscle
- machine learning
- coronary artery
- adipose tissue
- intensive care unit
- hepatitis b virus
- insulin resistance
- artificial intelligence
- mechanical ventilation
- nucleic acid