| Literature DB >> 34318387 |
Iacopo Fabiani1, Giorgia Panichella2, Alberto Aimo3,2, Chrysanthos Grigoratos3, Giuseppe Vergaro3,2, Nicola Riccardo Pugliese4, Stefano Taddei4, Daniela Maria Cardinale5, Claudio Passino3,2, Michele Emdin3,2, Alberto Giannoni3,2.
Abstract
Cancer and cardiovascular diseases, including heart failure (HF), are the main causes of death in Western countries. Several anticancer drugs and radiotherapy have adverse effects on the cardiovascular system, promoting left ventricular dysfunction and ultimately HF. Nonetheless, the relationship between cancer and HF is likely not unidirectional. Indeed, cancer and HF share common risk factors, and both have a bidirectional relationship with systemic inflammation, metabolic disturbances, and neurohormonal and immune activation. Few studies have assessed the impact of untreated cancer on the heart. The presence of an active cancer has been associated with elevated cardiac biomarkers, an initial impairment of left ventricular structure and function, autonomic dysfunction, and reduced exercise tolerance. In turn, these conditions might increase the risk of cardiac damage from chemotherapy and radiotherapy. HF drugs such as beta-blockers or inhibitors of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system might exert a protective effect on the heart even before the start of cancer therapies. In this review, we recapitulate the evidence of cardiac involvement in cancer patients naïve from chemotherapy and radiotherapy and no history of cardiac disease. We also focus on the perspectives for an early diagnosis and treatment to prevent the progression to cardiac dysfunction and clinical HF, and the potential benefits of cardioactive drugs on cancer progression.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Cardiac toxicity; Cardiovascular disease; Heart failure
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34318387 PMCID: PMC9197815 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-021-10151-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.654
Fig. 1Pathophysiological interplay heart-cancer disease in patients naïve to chemotherapy. Cancer and heart have a bidirectional relationship (cancer to heart; heart to cancer). Besides a direct effect mediated by chemo (and radio) therapy, cancer can impact on heart structure and function in several different pathways: inflammation, oxidative stress, metabolic (oncometabolites), and directly affecting sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activation
Subclinical markers of cardiac impairment in cancer patients
| Parameter type | Parameter | Patients (number) | Patient characteristics (age, sex, CV risk factors) | Cancer | Main findings | Citation number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biomarkers | NT-proBNP | 145 cancer patients not receiving treatment | Mean age 62.8 years 62% men, 38% women Median LVEF 52.5% Median NT-proBNP 7540 ng/L | Haematologic and solid organ malignancies | In 80% of patients with NT-proBNP > 3000 ng/L, there was evidence of fluid overload | [ |
| hs-cTnT | 3.512 cancer survivors | Mean age 76 years 38% men, 62% women Diabetes 30%, Hypertension 70% | Different cancers, especially breast, prostate and colorectal cancer | Cancer survivors had significantly higher odds of elevated hs-cTnT | [ | |
| NT-proBNP, MR-proANP, MR-proADM, CT-proET-1, copeptin, hsTnT, IL-6, CRP, SAA, haptoglobin, fibronectin | 555 treatment-naïve cancer patients | Mean age 62 years 40% men, 60% women Hypertension 45%, diabetes 8%, CVD 12% | Many types of cancer | All CV hormones and hs-TnT levels rose with tumour stage progression. All markers were independent predictors of mortality | [ | |
| hs-TnT | 30 patients before starting ICI therapy | Median age 68 years 77% men, 23% women CAD 13%, Current/former smokers 90%, Overweight/obese 67%, Hypertension 43% | Lung cancer | Only patients with baseline hs-TnT ≥ 14 ng/L died, had a stroke/TIA, or new-onset HF. 9/13 patients with progression of cardiac disease had baseline hs-TnT ≥ 14 ng/L | [ | |
| Exercise capacity | VO2peak | 248 | All women Median age 55 ± 8 years | Breast cancer | Breast cancer patients have marked impairment in VO2peak, which may be an independent predictor of survival in metastatic disease | [ |
| Automatic function | RHR | 548 treatment-naïve cancer patients | Median age 62 years 40.9% men, 32.7% women Hypertension 45%, diabetes 8%, CVD 5% | Breast, lung and gastrointestinal cancer, myelodysplastic and myeloproliferative diseases | ↑RHR display ↑ CV biomarkers RHR was associated with all-cause mortality, especially in lung and gastrointestinal cancers | [ |
| HRV | 383 gastric cancer patients | Median age 60.72 ± 11.82 years 71.5% men, 28.5% women | Gastric cancer | ↓HRV correlates with tumour stage and progression | [ | |
| VO2peak, LVEF, lean mass, HRV | 50 patients with CRC 51 with HF 51 controls | Median age 59.9 ± 12.0 40% men, 60% women Hypertension, diabetes | Colorectal cancer | ↓ LVEF and ↓VO2peak in CRC patients. Exercise capacity, LVEF, lean mass, and HRV were impaired in chemotherapy-treated and -naive patients | [ |
CAD coronary artery disease, CRC colorectal cancer, CRP C-reactive protein, CT-proET-1 C-terminal proendothelin-1, CV cardiovascular, HF heart failure, HRV heart rate variability, hs-cTnT high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T, ICI immune checkpoint inhibitor, IL-6 interleukin 6, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, MR-proADM mid-regional proadrenomedullin, MR-proANP mid-regional proatrial natriuretic peptide, NT-proBNP N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide, RHR resting heart rate, SAA serum amyloid A, VO peak oxygen cardiac consumption
Cardioactive drugs and their effects on tumour progression
| Drug tested | Study | Patients (number, age, sex, CV risk factors) | Cancer | Main findings | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BB ACEi | Retrospective cohort study | 1779 women 60% > 55 years Obesity 24% Hypertension 32% Diabetes 8% | Early-stage breast cancer | BB exposure—↓ hazard of recurrence and cause-specific mortality. BB combined with ACEi—↓ HR for recurrence and cause-specific mortality than ACEi alone | [ |
BB ACEi ARBs | Retrospective cohort study | 18,733 women Median age drug users, 62–63 years, non-users, 56–57 years | Non-metastatic breast cancer | Two BB were associated with increased recurrence rates. ACEi were associated with a slightly increased recurrence hazard. ARBs were not associated with recurrence | [ |
| BB | Meta-analysis | 20,898 subjects | Breast, prostate, melanoma, ovarian cancer | BB use can be associated with prolonged survival in cancer patients, especially patients with early-stage cancer primarily treated with surgery | [ |
| BB | Proof of concept study | 466 female patients Median age: hypertensive subgroup 57 years; non-hypertensive subgroup 54.5 years | Breast cancer | BB treated patients showed a significant reduction in metastasis development, tumour recurrence, longer disease-free interval and reduction in breast cancer mortality after 10 years | [ |
| ARBs | Meta-analysis | New cancer data (61,590 patients 5 trials) Data on solid organ cancers (68,402 patients 5 trials) Data on cancer deaths (93,515 patients 8 trials) | Solid cancer | ARBs had a significantly increased risk of new cancer occurrence. No statistically significant difference in cancer deaths | [ |
| ACEi/ARBs | Meta-analysis | 324,168 hypertensive patients from 70 randomised controlled trials | Any cancer | No difference in the risk of cancer with ARBs and ACEi. There was an increased risk with the combination of ACEi plus ARBs | [ |
| ACEi/ARBs | Meta-analysis | Data for cancer occurrence (59,004 patients, 10 trials) Data for cancer death (37,515 patients, 7 trials) Data for GI cancer (23,291 patients, 5 trials) | Any cancer | No effect on occurrence of cancer No effect on cancer death | [ |
ACEi Angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors, ARBs angiotensin-receptor blockers, BB beta-blockers, CV cardiovascular
Fig. 2Potential cardiological clinical work-up in patients naïve to chemotherapy. Risk stratification in patients with cancer prior to chemotherapy remains pivotal. Several different methods could be employed. In the presence of preclinical alterations, a tighter cardiological work-up might be indicated