| Literature DB >> 30157941 |
Becky Meiners1, Chetan Shenoy2, Beshay N Zordoky3.
Abstract
Anthracyclines are very effective chemotherapeutic agents that are widely used to treat pediatric and adult cancer patients. Unfortunately, the clinical utility of anthracyclines is limited by cardiotoxicity. There are several established risk factors for anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity (AIC), including total cumulative dose, very young and very old age, concomitant use of other cardiotoxic agents, and concurrent mediastinal radiation. However, the role of sex as a risk factor for AIC is not well defined. In pediatric cancer patients, most studies support the notion that female sex is a significant risk factor for AIC. Conversely, there is anecdotal evidence that female sex protects against AIC in adult cancer patients. The lack of consistency in study designs and the different definitions of cardiotoxicity preclude reaching consensus regarding the role of sex as a risk factor for AIC in both pediatric and adult cancer patients. Therefore, more clinical research using reliable techniques such as cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is needed to determine if there truly are sex differences in AIC. In adult preclinical rodent studies, however, there is unequivocal evidence that female sex confers significant protection against AIC, with a possible protective effect of female sex hormones and/or a detrimental role of the male sex hormones. Although findings of these rodent studies may not perfectly mirror the clinical scenario in adult anthracycline-treated cancer patients, understanding the mechanisms of this significant sexual dimorphism may reveal important cardioprotective mechanisms that can be therapeutically targeted.Entities:
Keywords: Anthracyclines; Cardiotoxicity; Doxorubicin; Female; Male; Sex
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30157941 PMCID: PMC6114275 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-018-0198-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Sex-related differences in anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy in pediatric cancer patients
| Pediatric studies | Number of patients | Age at diagnosis in years | Follow-up | Anthracycline cumulative dose | Major conclusion/comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silber et al. [ | 150 | 0.23–21, mean 9.5 years | 0.09–18 years, average 4.7 | 50–750 mg/m2 | Female sex was a significant risk factor for cardiac abnormality (OR = 3.2) |
| Lipshultz et al. [ | 120 | 0.6–28.9 | 2–14.6 | 244–550 mg/m2 | Female sex was an independent risk factor for cardiac abnormality after DOX therapy. |
| Krischer et al. [ | 6493 | < 1 year to > 15 years | 1 year | From < 99 mg/m2 to > 500 mg/m2 | Female sex increased the risk of anthracycline-associated cardiotoxicity (RR = 1.9) |
| Ewer et al. [ | 113 | 1–17 | 4–180 months | 113–506 mg/m2 | More girls than boys developed cardiac dysfunction (not statistically significant, small sample size) |
| Green et al. [ | 2710 | < 16 | Up to 20 years | 59–691 mg/m2 | Females are at 4 times higher risk of congestive heart failure after |
| Pein et al. [ | 229 | 0–21 | > 15 years | 40–600 mg/m2 | Sex was not a significant risk factor |
| Van Dalen et al. [ | 830 | 0.1–18.0 years, median 8.7 years | 0.01–28.4 years, median 7.1 years | 15–900 mg/m2 | Sex was not a significant risk factor for clinical heart failure (female RR = 1.46, 95% CI 0.62–3.43 |
| Hudson et al. [ | 217 | 5 years | 3–21.7 years | 25–510 mg/m2 | Sex was not a significant risk factor for abnormal non-invasive cardiac testing |
| Armstrong et al. [ | 20,483 | 0–20 years | > 5 years | NA | Female sex was a risk factor for mortality due to cardiac disease (RR = 1.4). |
| Mulrooney et al. [ | 14,358 | 0–20 | > 5 years | NA | Female sex was a risk factor for congestive heart failure (HR = 1.4) |
| Lipshultz et al. [ | 66 (out of 100 enrolled patients) | Mean age 7.8 years | 5 years | 300 mg/m2 | Reduction in left ventricular fractional shortening was significantly greater in DOX-treated girls than boys |
| Rathe et al. [ | 80 | 0.8–13.4 | 1.1– 20.6 | 120–300 mg/m2 | Sex was not a significant risk factor for subclinical decline in cardiac function (less than 300 mg/m2 DOX) |
| Amigoni et al. [ | 62 | 0–13 | 6–19 years | 120–280 mg/m2 | Left ventricular mass and dimensions were reduced only in female ALL survivors (less than 300 mg/m2 DOX) |
| Andolina et al. [ | 308 | < 1 year to > 5 years | ≥ 5 years | Mean = 210 mg/m2 | Sex was not a significant risk factor |
| Van der Pal et al. [ | 525 | 9 | ≥ 5 years | 33–720 mg/m2 | Sex was not a significant risk factor |
| Brouwer et al. [ | 277 | ≤ 20 years | 5–31 years | 50–600 mg/m2 | Female sex was protective from diastolic dysfunction (OR = 0.3). Sex was not a risk factor for systolic dysfunction |
| Vandecruys et al. [ | 37 | 0.2–12.2 | 10.6–18.3 | 180–240 mg/m2 | Subclinical echocardiographic abnormalities were found more frequently in male ALL survivors who had received less than 250 mg/m2 DOX |
| Toro-Salazar et al. [ | 46 | Mean of 11 ± 5.1 | 2.5–26.9 | 200–600 mg/m2 | Higher extracellular volume was detected in female than in male survivors who had received 200 mg/m2 or more |
| Ylanen et al. [ | 62 | 0–13.8 | 4.9–18 | 80–419 mg/m2 | There was a trend toward a male predominance among those with abnormal left ventricular ejection fraction and those with abnormal right ventricular ejection fraction |
| Tham et al. [ | 30 | 7–19 years | 7.6 ± 4.5 | 80–375 mg/m2 | Higher non-contrast myocardial T1 and extra-cellular volume (ECV) was observed in female subjects |
Sex-related differences in anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy in adult cancer patients
| Adult studies | Number of patients | Age at diagnosis | Time after chemo-therapy | Anthracycline dose | Major conclusion/comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Von Hoff et al. [ | 4018 | Mainly adult population (10% < 18 years) | 0–231 days | 13–5047 mg/m2 | No effect of sex |
| Hrushesky et al. [ | 34 | 19–78 | 2 years | 300–550 mg/m2 | Higher ratio of females developed CHF (7 out of 24, compared to 1 out of 10) |
| Clements et al. [ | 33 | Mean age of 55 ± 14 | Within 1 year after the onset of treatment | 40–618 mg/m2 | Male sex was an independent risk factor for development of systolic and diastolic cardiac dysfunction early after initiation of DOX |
| Limat et al. [ | 151 | 25–79 | 1 year | 50–400 mg/m2 | No effect of sex |
| Hequet et al. [ | 141 | 15–69 | At least 5 years | 250–550 mg/m2 | Male sex was a risk factor for subclinical cardiomyopathy |
| Elbl et al. [ | 47 | 18–76 | 1 year | 50–400 mg/m2 | Sex was not a risk factor for either drop in EF > 10% or all cardiac events |
| Hershman et al. [ | 4001 | > 65 | 8 years | NA | No difference (elderly population) |
| Neilan et al. [ | 91 | Mean of 43 | A median of 88 months | Mean = 276 mg/m2 | No significant effect of gender on major adverse cardiac events |
| Szmit et al. [ | 208 | Median of 56 | After the last administered cycle of chemotherapy | 300–400 mg/m2 | Female sex was protective for left ventricular systolic dysfunction (OR = 0.324) |
| Wang et al. [ | 2285 | Mean of 53 | 193–1666 days | Doxorubicin | Male gender hazard ratio of 1.84 for cardiac events (symptomatic heart failure or cardiac death) |
Sex-related differences in anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy in preclinical adult animal models
| Study | Species | DOX dose | Major findings/proposed mechanisms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Julicher et al. [ | Adult Lou/M Wsl rats | Chronic | Female rats were protected from DOX-induced cardiotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, and hepatotoxicity. |
| van Almen et al. [ | Adult WT and thrombospondin-2 KO mice | Chronic | Female sex protected against DOX-induced myocardial fibrosis in the KO mice. |
| Zhang et al. [ | Adult SHR | Chronic | Female sex is protected against DOX-induced cardiotoxicity and nephrotoxicity. Ovariectomy prevented this protection. |
| Moulin et al. [ | Adult Wistar rats | Chronic | Female sex protected against DOX-induced cardiotoxicity. No mortality in females, up to 50% mortality in males. |
| Moulin et al. [ | Adult Wistar rats | Chronic | Sexual dimorphism of cardiac phospholipid content |
| Gonzalez et al. [ | Adult SST-2 tumor-bearing SHR | Acute | Adult tumor-bearing male SHRs are more cardiosensitive to Dox than female or hormone-deficient animals |
| Zordoky et al. [ | Adult WKY and SHHF rats | Chronic | Female sex protected against DOX-induced hypertension in WKY rats and protected against DOX-induced cardiac dysfunction in SHHF rats. Female sex protected against DOX-induced nephrotoxicity in both strains. |
| Jenkins et al. [ | Young adult B6C3F1 mice (8 weeks) | Chronic | Female sex protected against DOX-induced myocardial injury |
| Grant et al. [ | Adult C57Bl/6 mice | Acute 20 mg/kg once | Adult male mice are more susceptible to DOX-induced cardiotoxicity. Possible involvement of CYP450 differential expression |