Cardiovascular Health Considerations for Primary Care Physicians Treating Breast Cancer Survivors.

Mayo Clin Proc

Division of General Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA. Electronic address:

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Breast cancer survivors face a heightened risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mainly due to the cardiotoxic effects of some cancer treatments and shared risk factors.
  • - A PubMed review analyzed 152 studies to gather insights on cardiovascular health management for these survivors, highlighting common risk factors like obesity, inactivity, and smoking.
  • - Primary care physicians play a crucial role in the long-term care of breast cancer survivors, needing to monitor CVD risks, perform evaluations, and refer to specialists as necessary.

Article Abstract

Breast cancer (BC) survivors are at increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and require their primary care physicians to manage their long-term general medical care, including cardiovascular (CV) health. Yet, evidence exists that some primary care physicians possess insufficient knowledge about survivorship care. With the goal of bridging these knowledge gaps, a PubMed review was conducted from July 7, 2020, through October 2, 2020, with an updated PubMed review from January 3, 2024, through April 28, 2024, focusing on CV health considerations in the primary care of BC survivors. Search terms included variations of "breast cancer survivors" and "cardiovascular." In total, 152 publications were included. Breasts cancer survivors may have increased CVD risk because some anticancer therapies are cardiotoxic and risk factors for BC often also increase the risk for CVD. Multiple risk factors overlap for BC and CVD such as older age, Western diet, early menarche, physical inactivity, high body mass index, and smoking. In this review, results are summarized from studies that report the presence of CV risk factors and CVD in BC survivors. Also described are the CV effects of BC therapies (chemotherapy, hormonal agents, targeted therapies, and radiotherapy) and the type of CV evaluation (cardiac imaging and measurement of biomarkers) that these patients may need. Primary care physicians have an important role in managing the CV health of BC survivors from preventing, assessing, and managing CV risk factors to referring patients to appropriate specialists when needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mayocp.2024.08.014DOI Listing

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