AI Article Synopsis

  • Anthracycline chemotherapy for breast cancer can lead to heart issues, and recent guidelines suggest using Global Longitudinal Systolic Strain (GLS) to detect early signs of cardiac dysfunction before more severe symptoms develop.
  • A study involving 114 HER2 negative breast cancer patients assessed subclinical cardiac dysfunction through echocardiograms at three stages during treatment, revealing that 38% experienced significant reductions in GLS over 12 months, even though no patients met the criteria for more advanced heart failure.
  • The research suggests a method for identifying at-risk patients by combining the percentage reduction in GLS and absolute GLS values, which could help in adjusting care strategies for those with high baseline GLS levels.

Article Abstract

Aims: Anthracycline chemotherapy (AC) for breast cancer can cause cancer therapy-related cardiac dysfunction (CTRCD) with resultant heart failure, traditionally defined as a reduction in left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction on echocardiography. In recent years, global longitudinal systolic strain (GLS) has been used to identify subclinical cardiac dysfunction prior to development of overt CTRCD. Recent harmonized guidelines have incorporated GLS into definitions for CTRCD to identify cardiac dysfunction and inform decisions regarding cardioprotective strategies.

Methods And Results: We evaluated subclinical dysfunction in breast cancer patients treated with AC and determined the echocardiographic and patient factors associated with significant GLS changes. One hundred fourteen HER2 negative patients treated with AC were prospectively recruited and underwent serial echocardiograms (LVEF and LVGLS) at three time points (prior to AC, 3 months, and 1 year). CTRCD was defined as an asymptomatic reduction in LVEF of 10% or symptomatic drop of 5% to LVEF <53%. Subclinical LV dysfunction was defined as a reduction of ≥10% in GLS compared with baseline, recognizing that this cut off identified an 'at risk cohort' rather than patients with established CTRCD. No participant demonstrated CTRCD by reduction in LVEF. Forty-three patients (38%) demonstrated a ≥10% relative reduction in GLS at 12 months; 20/43 (47%) had a reduced absolute GLS to <16%, and were older, had hypertension, increased LV mass, lower baseline e' velocity and GLS. GLS ≥20.5% at baseline yielded a sensitivity of 79% and specificity of 87% for a normal GLS (i.e., ≥16%) at 1 year despite a ≥10% reduction from baseline.

Conclusions: We present a stepwise evaluation for subclinical LV dysfunction using both a relative reduction in GLS combined with an absolute reduction in GLS. We believe our findings may re-stratify patients with a high baseline GLS into a lower risk group despite transient relative GLS decrements ≥10%.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11424371PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.14884DOI Listing

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