| Literature DB >> 31841257 |
Daniel Lapirow1, Andre La Gerche1,2, Claudia Toro3, Emma Masango4, Ben Costello2, Enzo Porello4,5, Louise Ludlow3,4, Glenn Marshall6, Toby Trahair6, Marion Mateos6,7, Jeremy Lewin8, Jennifer Byrne8,9, Rose Boutros8, Rebecca Manudhane10, John Heath11, Julian Ayer8, Melissa Gabriel8, Thomas Walwyn12, Jelena Saundankar12, Jonathon Forsey7,8, Ha Le4,13, Kylie Mason14,15, David Celermajer16,17, Peter Downie18, Roderick Walker19, Lucy Holland19, Michelle Martin3, Lorna McLeman3, Yonatan Diamond3, Maurizio Marcocci20, Susan Donath4, Michael Cheung4,21, David A Elliott3,4,22, Rachel Conyers1,3,4.
Abstract
Cancer therapy related cardiac dysfunction (CTRCD) is an area of increasing focus, particularly during the survivorship period, for paediatric, adolescent and adult cancer survivors. With the advent of immunotherapy and targeted therapy, there is a new set of mechanisms from which paediatric and young adult patients with cancer may suffer cardiovascular injury. Furthermore, cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the survivorship period. The recently established Australian Cardio-Oncology Registry is the largest and only population-based cardiotoxicity database of paediatric and adolescent and young adult oncology patients in the world, and the first paediatric registry that will document cardiotoxicity caused by chemotherapy and novel targeted therapies using a prospective approach. The database is designed for comprehensive data collection and evaluation of the Australian practice in terms of diagnosis and management of CTRCD. Using the Australian Cardio-Oncology Registry critical clinical information will be collected regarding predisposing factors for the development of CTRCD, the rate of subclinical left ventricular dysfunction and transition to overt heart failure, further research into protectant molecules against cardiac dysfunction and aid in the discovery of which genetic variants predispose to CTRCD. A health economic arm of the study will assess the cost/benefit of both the registry and cardio-oncology clinical implementation. Finally, an imaging arm will establish if exercise cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and VO2 max testing is a more sensitive predictor of cardiac reserve in paediatric and adolescent and young adult oncology patients exposed to cardiac toxic therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Australian Cardio-Oncology Registry; Australian registry; biobank; cardio-oncology; paediatric cancer; registry
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 31841257 DOI: 10.1111/imj.14719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Med J ISSN: 1444-0903 Impact factor: 2.048