AI Article Synopsis

  • Most studies on heart disease usually look at systemic therapies and radiation separately, creating challenges in preventing heart damage from treatments.
  • The analysis covers various factors contributing to cardiac toxicity, including the type of treatment, patient specifics like age and medical history, and how these elements interact.
  • Understanding cardiac toxicity as a combined effect of different therapies rather than just one can help in developing better prevention strategies in the future.

Article Abstract

When focusing on heart disease, most available studies split the two different parts of the adjuvant treatment, i.e., systemic therapies and radiation therapy, making it difficult to implement efficient strategies for preventing treatment-induced cardiac toxicity. This paper reviews the current understanding of treatments-induced cardiac toxicity in a global approach. Many factors should be considered when assessing the cardiac hazard. Treatment-related risk factors include heart dose exposure, chemotherapy, targeted agents such as HER2 inhibitors, but also endocrine agents, or anesthetic procedure. Patients' characteristics should also be taken into account. Age, menopausal status, stress, previous history of cardiac disease, genetic profile, and body mass index could all impact on cardiac function after adjuvant therapies. Cardiac toxicity should not be analyzed as the consequence of a specific therapy, but should be considered as the result of additive or supra-additive toxicities. By this way, it will be possible to implement new strategies for preventing treatment-induced cardiac toxicity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ctrv.2010.08.007DOI Listing

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