Cardio-oncology is an emerging subject in cardiology events and journals. Increased
cancer (CA) incidence and survival rates, easier access to health care and the
multiplicity of chemotherapy regimens all contribute to the increase in the diagnosis of
cardiovascular complications in patients with CA. The increase in CA prevalence and
mortality, as well as its cardiovascular complications, is the price that nations pay
for the aging of their populations in an oncogenic environment.[1] Therefore, we are faced with an
epidemiological problem and major clinical challenges.The discovery, in the 1960s, in the Adriatic Sea coast, of a red pigment produced by a
fungus with great cytotoxic power has changed paradigms and introduced the concept of
cure in clinical cancerology.[2] Reports
of toxicity previously presented with other chemotherapeutic agents had also been
confirmed with the new class of anthracyclines. The novelty was the real possibility of
cure. In the risk-benefit evaluation, adverse effects were neglected on behalf of the
decision to use it.[3] Warnings on the
cardiotoxicity of doxorubicin (DOXO) came with the description of the classic ‘von Hoff
curve’, where the risk of heart failure incidence at cumulative doses above 500
mg/m[2] was
demonstrated.[4]Initially, the mechanism was said to be an oxidative effect of the chemotherapeutic
agent. Later, it was demonstrated that DOXO had a blocking effect on topoisomerases II
alpha (neoplastic cells) and beta (cardiomyocyte), as well as its consequence to the
structure of DNA, which caused cell death.[5] Other mechanisms of cellular aggression did not become clear until
recently, when the action on the mechanical properties of cancerous and healthy cells
was demonstrated, especially their effect on the cellular membrane.[6]Today, there is a pertinent criticism about the lack of studies using judicious
methodology and satisfactory casuistry in cardio-oncology. Indeed, there is a lack of
basic science research addressing the aggression mechanisms in cardiovascular disease in
CA patients. The study published in Arq Bras Cardiol[7] investigates the relationships between arterial stiffness and
ventricular dysfunction in patients undergoing DOXO and cyclophosphamide.Theoretically, the cytotoxic impairment of DOXO could affect the endothelium, with
consequences to blood pressure variables, secondarily becoming one of the multiple
ventricular myocardial aggressions. Actually, there are no significant clinical reports
of arterial hypertension in DOXO users, unlike patients undergoing angiogenesis
inhibitors that act by blocking one of several endothelial growth pathways.[8],[9] The decision to study DOXO is justified by the high
prevalence of its use in solid tumors such as breast cancer and hematological
tumors.In the cohort studied, which comprised 24 middle-aged women, high global cardiovascular
risk was clearly observed. On average, the women were hypertensive and obese. There was
no change in blood pressure variables in left ventricular function according to
measurements by pulse wave velocity and two-dimensional echocardiography. The negative
result should not be viewed with dismay. We need all the information we can find on
these mechanisms. It is urgent to understand the pathophysiology of these cardiovascular
aggressions. Only then will we be able to design ethical clinical trials with the
highest possibility of results that might interfere with the reduction of cardiovascular
lesions and, above all, with the improvement of survival of patients with cancer.
Authors: D D Von Hoff; M W Layard; P Basa; H L Davis; A L Von Hoff; M Rozencweig; F M Muggia Journal: Ann Intern Med Date: 1979-11 Impact factor: 25.391