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Multidisciplinary team management of carcinoid heart disease. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Carcinoid heart disease (CHD) develops from fibrosis of the heart valves caused by substances released from neuroendocrine tumors, especially in patients with advanced carcinoid syndrome (CS), leading to serious heart complications.
  • CHD occurs in 20% of patients with CS, resulting in valve failure that causes right heart failure and significantly worsens prognosis compared to those without valvular issues.
  • Diagnosis relies on monitoring specific biomarkers and regular echocardiograms, while treatment focuses on managing CS symptoms, with surgical intervention being the best option for severe cases, but it carries a risk of high mortality.

Article Abstract

Carcinoid heart disease (CHD) is a consequence of valvular fibrosis triggered by vasoactive substances released from neuroendocrine tumours, classically in those with metastatic disease and resulting in tricuspid and pulmonary valve failure. CHD affects one in five patients who have carcinoid syndrome (CS). Valve leaflets become thickened, retracted and immobile, resulting most often in regurgitation that causes right ventricular dilatation and ultimately, right heart failure. The development of CHD heralds a significantly worse prognosis than those patients with CS who do not develop valvular disease. Diagnosis requires a low threshold of suspicion in all patients with CS, since symptoms occur late in the disease process and clinical signs are difficult to elicit. As a result, routine screening is recommended using the biomarker, N-terminal pro-natriuretic peptide, and regular echocardiography is then required for diagnosis and follow-up. There is no direct medical therapy for CHD, but the focus of non-surgical care is to control CS symptoms, reduce tumour load and decrease hormone levels. Valve surgery improves long-term outcome for those with severe disease compared to medical management, although peri-operative mortality remains at between 10 and 20% in experienced centres. Therefore, care needs to be multidisciplinary at all stages, with clear discussion with the patient and between teams to ensure optimum outcome for these often-complex patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6933832PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/EC-19-0413DOI Listing

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