Literature DB >> 28643731

Cardiotoxic effects of radiotherapy and strategies to reduce them in patients with breast cancer: An overview.

Katarzyna Rygiel1.   

Abstract

Cardiotoxicity of various anticancer therapies, including radiotherapy (RT), can lead to cardiovascular (CV) complications, and their severity depends on many factors, including the site of action, the applied dose, the method of administration, the presence of pre-existing CV diseases, or CV risk factors, the individual patient characteristics, and the current or previous use of antineoplastic therapies. Cardiotoxicity can occur immediately upon administration of the anticancer therapy or it may have a delayed onset (months or years after the treatment). For an oncology treatment team, it is essential that the patients with cancer are in their best cardiac condition before they initiate anticancer therapy, during remission, and after its termination, and thus, a collaboration with cardiologists is of utmost importance. This article reviews cardiotoxicity associated with RT, focusing on patients with breast cancer. In addition, it outlines the main management strategies to assess, monitor, reduce, or possibly prevent RT-induced cardiotoxicity, based on the current research evidence. Medline literature review relating to this subject was performed, using the electronic search for the keywords "radiotherapy" and "cardiotoxicity" on PubMed for inclusion of the previous publications, and further search of reference articles on the detection and management of radiation-related heart disease in patients with breast cancer was conducted.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28643731     DOI: 10.4103/0973-1482.187303

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cancer Res Ther        ISSN: 1998-4138            Impact factor:   1.805


  9 in total

1.  Determinants of Cardiorespiratory Fitness Following Thoracic Radiotherapy in Lung or Breast Cancer Survivors.

Authors:  Justin M Canada; Cory R Trankle; Salvatore Carbone; Leo F Buckley; Medina de Chazal; Hayley Billingsley; Ronald K Evans; Ryan Garten; Benjamin W Van Tassell; Dinesh Kadariya; Adolfo Mauro; Stefano Toldo; Eleonora Mezzaroma; Ross Arena; William G Hundley; John D Grizzard; Elisabeth Weiss; Antonio Abbate
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2019-12-26       Impact factor: 2.778

Review 2.  Cardiovascular Toxicities of Radiation Therapy.

Authors:  Gary D Lewis; Andrew Farach
Journal:  Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J       Date:  2019 Oct-Dec

3.  Heart Dose and Outcomes in Radiation Treatment for Esophageal Cancer.

Authors:  Meghan W Macomber; Stephen R Bowen; Olga Gopan; Rosanna Yeung; Smith Apisarnthanarax; Jing Zeng; Shilpen Patel
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2018-03-27

Review 4.  Heart toxicity from breast cancer radiotherapy : Current findings, assessment, and prevention.

Authors:  Marc D Piroth; René Baumann; Wilfried Budach; Jürgen Dunst; Petra Feyer; Rainer Fietkau; Wulf Haase; Wolfgang Harms; Thomas Hehr; David Krug; Arnd Röser; Felix Sedlmayer; Rainer Souchon; Frederik Wenz; Rolf Sauer
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  2018-10-11       Impact factor: 3.621

5.  On the use of flexible excess hazard regression models for describing long-term breast cancer survival: a case-study using population-based cancer registry data.

Authors:  R Schaffar; A Belot; B Rachet; L Woods
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2019-01-28       Impact factor: 4.430

6.  Alteration of renal Na,K-ATPase in rats following the mediastinal γ-irradiation.

Authors:  Barbora Kaločayová; Ivona Kovačičová; Jana Radošinská; Ľubomíra Tóthová; Lucia Jagmaševič-Mézešová; Marko Fülöp; Ján Slezák; Pavel Babál; Pavol Janega; Norbert Vrbjar
Journal:  Physiol Rep       Date:  2019-02

7.  Associations Between Ambient Particle Radioactivity and Blood Pressure: The NAS (Normative Aging Study).

Authors:  Marguerite M Nyhan; Brent A Coull; Annelise J Blomberg; Carol L Z Vieira; Eric Garshick; Abdulaziz Aba; Pantel Vokonas; Diane R Gold; Joel Schwartz; Petros Koutrakis
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 5.501

8.  The N-terminal polypeptide derived from vMIP-II exerts its anti-tumor activity in human breast cancer by regulating lncRNA SPRY4-IT1.

Authors:  Haihua Wu; Yueyue Wang; Tiantian Chen; Yu Li; Haifeng Wang; Lingyu Zhang; Sulian Chen; Wenrui Wang; Qingling Yang; Changjie Chen
Journal:  Biosci Rep       Date:  2018-10-17       Impact factor: 3.840

Review 9.  High Density Lipoprotein and Its Precursor Protein Apolipoprotein A1 as Potential Therapeutics to Prevent Anthracycline Associated Cardiotoxicity.

Authors:  George E G Kluck; Kristina K Durham; Jeong-Ah Yoo; Bernardo L Trigatti
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2020-04-28
  9 in total

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