AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the effects of cardiotoxic chemotherapy on skeletal muscle in breast cancer patients, specifically looking at muscle fat, metabolism, and oxygen consumption.
  • Thirty-four patients were monitored using advanced imaging techniques at multiple stages of chemotherapy, revealing declines in physical strength and changes in muscle blood flow and oxygen extraction.
  • Results showed adaptations in smaller muscle exercises during chemotherapy but insufficient energy maintenance during larger muscle activities, indicating altered muscle metabolism and elevated fat in muscle tissue.

Article Abstract

Background: While cardiotoxic chemotherapy is known to negatively impact cardiac function and hemoglobin levels, the impact on skeletal muscle has been understudied among patients. The purpose was to longitudinally characterize myosteatosis (muscle fat), skeletal muscle metabolism, and oxygen (O2) consumption during cardiotoxic chemotherapy for breast cancer.

Patients And Methods: Thirty-four patients with stage I-III breast cancer were enrolled before trastuzumab-containing and/or anthracycline-containing chemotherapy. We used magnetic resonance imaging to non-invasively quantify thigh myosteatosis (fat-water imaging), and lower leg metabolism (31P spectroscopy), O2 consumption (custom techniques), and peak power output during single-leg plantarflexion exercise at pre-, mid-, end-chemotherapy, and 1-year. We also measured pulmonary VO2peak and maximal leg press strength.

Results: During chemotherapy, VO2peak and leg press strength decreased while peak plantarflexion power output was maintained. At mid-chemotherapy, hemoglobin decreased (16%) and lower leg blood flow increased (37%) to maintain lower leg O2 delivery; exercise Pi:PCr and myosteatosis increased. Between mid- and end-chemotherapy, lower leg O2 extraction (28%) and O2 consumption (21%) increased, while plantarflexion exercise efficiency (watts/O2 consumed) decreased. At one year, VO2peak and leg press strength returned to pre-chemotherapy levels, but lower leg exercise O2 extraction, consumption and Pi:PCr, and myosteatosis remained elevated.

Conclusion: Lower leg skeletal muscle blood flow and O2 extraction adapt to compensate for chemotherapy-related hemoglobin reduction for small muscle mass exercise but are insufficient to maintain large muscle mass exercise (pulmonary VO2peak, leg press strength). The excess O2 required to perform work, increased Pi:PCr ratio and myosteatosis together suggest suppressed fat oxidation during chemotherapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9438914PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oncolo/oyac092DOI Listing

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