Prospective surveillance and management of cardiac toxicity and health in breast cancer survivors.
Publication/Presentation Date
4-15-2012
Abstract
Breast cancer is commonly diagnosed in postmenopausal women, the majority of whom express 1 or more cardiovascular disease risk factors. Cardiovascular disease poses a significant competing risk for morbidity and mortality among nonmetastatic breast cancer survivors. Adjuvant systemic therapies may result in late-cardiac toxicity decades after treatment completion. The cumulative incidence of treatment-related cardiotoxic outcomes may be as high as 33% after some adjuvant breast cancer therapies. Breast cancer treatment-induced cardiotoxicity may manifest as cardiomyopathy, coronary ischemia, thromboembolism, arrhythmias and conduction abnormalities, and valvular and pericardial disease. Evidence indicates that preexisting cardiovascular conditions such as hypertension or left ventricular dysfunction may compound the adverse effects of cardiotoxic treatments. There are currently no published clinical practice guidelines that address ongoing cardiac surveillance for cardiotoxicity after breast cancer, and existing guidelines for monitoring and promoting cardiovascular health in older women are often not followed. The multidisciplinary prospective surveillance system proposed elsewhere in this supplement would allow for earlier detection of cardiotoxicity from treatment and may improve monitoring of cardiovascular health in the growing population of breast cancer survivors.
Volume
118
Issue
8 Suppl
First Page
2270
Last Page
2276
ISSN
1097-0142
Published In/Presented At
Schmitz, K. H., Prosnitz, R. G., Schwartz, A. L., & Carver, J. R. (2012). Prospective surveillance and management of cardiac toxicity and health in breast cancer survivors. Cancer, 118(8 Suppl), 2270–2276. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.27462
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Oncology
PubMedID
22488701
Department(s)
Department of Radiation Oncology
Document Type
Article