AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzed records of 47 patients with primary cardiac tumors from Kyushu University Hospital, finding that 13 (28%) were diagnosed with malignant tumors, including various sarcomas and lymphomas, highlighting the rarity of such cases.
  • - Cardiovascular complications were prevalent, with 77% of patients experiencing issues like heart dysfunction, arrhythmias, and right heart failure, often linked to the aggressive multimodal treatment involving surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy.
  • - Two cases exemplified severe complications: one patient faced significant heart failure post-treatment, while another developed a heart block due to tumor placement, indicating the need for careful management to improve patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Malignant primary cardiac tumors require multimodal approaches including surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy, but these treatments can be associated with cardiovascular complications. However, few reports have described the cardiovascular complications related to primary cardiac tumor treatment because of their rarity.

Methods: Clinical records of patients with primary cardiac tumors treated at Kyushu University Hospital from January 2010 to August 2021 were retrospectively examined.

Results: Of the 47 primary cardiac tumor patients, 13 (28%) were diagnosed with malignancy, including 5 angiosarcomas, 3 intimal sarcomas, 3 diffuse large B-cell lymphomas, 1 Ewing's sarcoma and 1 fibrosarcoma. Cardiovascular events were observed in 10 patients (77%), including cardiac dysfunction in 6 patients, arrhythmias in 5 patients, right heart failure in 2 patients, and excessively prolonged prothrombin time due to the combination of warfarin and chemotherapy in 1 patient. Two patients who showed notable cardiac complications are described. Case A involved a 69-year-old woman who underwent surgery for a left atrial intimal sarcoma, followed by postoperative chemotherapy with doxorubicin plus ifosfamide and radiotherapy. After three cycles of chemotherapy and sequential radiotherapy, her left ventricular ejection fraction decreased to 34%, and ongoing heart failure therapy was required. Case B involved a 66-year-old man who received chemotherapy for primary cardiac lymphoma, resulting in tumor shrinkage. However, due to tumor involvement of the intraventricular septum, atrioventricular block developed, requiring cardiac pacemaker implantation.

Conclusion: High incidences of cardiac failure and arrhythmias were observed during multimodal treatments for malignant primary cardiac tumors. Proper management of complications may lead to a favorable prognosis in patients with malignant primary cardiac tumors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jjco/hyae138DOI Listing

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