Literature DB >> 34318387

Subclinical cardiac damage in cancer patients before chemotherapy.

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.
© 2021. The Author(s).

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


Introduction

Recent advances in cancer therapies have considerably improved the survival rates of many cancers [1], but several anticancer drugs and radiotherapy regimens have detrimental effects on the heart, leading to pericardial and myocardial disease, left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, and ultimately heart failure (HF) [2]. In this perspective, there is a growing interest in the bidirectional relationship between cancer and HF, beyond the possible effects of cancer therapies. Cancer per se might promote HF development, whereas HF could act as a pro-oncogenic condition [3]. Cancer and HF share several risk factors, such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and smoking [4-6], and the systemic metabolic alterations could link one disease to the other [7, 8]. While there is evidence that patients with HF have a higher incidence of cancer compared to the general population [9], data on the association between cancer alone (i.e., naïve to therapies) and HF are very limited. Until now, research mainly focused on the long-term risk of cardiovascular disease in cancer survivors [10-12]. In this review, we discuss the main evidence of subclinical cardiac damage in treatment-naïve cancer patients, and recapitulate the possible mechanisms leading to HF, including inflammation, oxidative stress, and autonomic impairment. We also discuss the potential roles of drug therapies for the prevention of cancer-related cardiotoxicity, and the potential benefits of cardioactive drugs on cancer progression.

Possible mechanisms leading to HF in cancer patients

Systemic inflammation and oxidative stress, neurohormonal activation, autonomic dysfunction, clonal haematopoiesis, and metabolic derangements are the main proposed mechanisms whereby cancer may promote cardiac dysfunction, and, ultimately, HF (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1

Pathophysiological 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

Pathophysiological 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 Several conditions have detrimental effects on the heart and may lead to HF. Systemic amyloidoses are a group of diseases characterized by the deposition of amyloid, an aggregate of misfolded proteins, in one or more organs. The two most common forms of cardiac amyloidosis are due transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR) and light-chain amyloidosis (AL), derived from abnormal light chains produced by plasma cell malignancies [13]. Pheochromocytomas, rare catecholamine-secreting tumours of the adrenal glands, often cause a severe cardiotoxicity mediated by β adrenergic receptor stimulation, which manifests in several forms, from Takotsubo to dilated cardiomyopathy [14, 15]. Carcinoid heart disease is the cardiac involvement of serotonin-producing neuroendocrine tumours (NETs), due to fibrotic endocardial plaques with associated valve dysfunction often leading to right-sided HF [16]. In acromegaly, the excess of growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-I) induces a specific cardiomyopathy whose most common feature is concentric hypertrophy, usually associated with diastolic dysfunction and eventual impairment of systolic function and HF [17].

Inflammation and oxidative stress

Most malignancies elicit an inflammatory response through the release of proinflammatory cytokines and acute phase proteins that create a protumorigenic microenvironment, which in turn contributes to cancer invasiveness [18-23]. Inflammation also promotes microvascular endothelial dysfunction and HF development (particularly HF with preserved ejection fraction) in experimental models, and proinflammatory cytokines (such as tumour necrosis factor-alpha [TNFα], interleukin-1β and -6) may reduce contractility and promote adverse LV remodelling [3, 24, 25]. Oxidative stress, due for example to reactive oxygen species (ROS), works synergistically with inflammation to promote both cancer and HF [26]. Sustained exposure to ROS can cause DNA damage and further support cancer promotion and progression [27-29]. Cancer itself can foster oxidative stress, mainly through the effect of oncogenes (e.g., Myc or Ras) affecting cellular metabolism, redox homeostasis, and DNA replication [30]. Similarly, mitochondrial dysfunction is a prominent feature of HF, resulting in increased cellular levels of ROS and reactive nitrogen species (RNS), altered calcium handling, mitochondrial DNA replication, excitation–contraction coupling, promotion of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and apoptosis, and myocardial fibrosis [31, 32].

Renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system activation

Increased rennin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) activity has been demonstrated in various tumour types, including kidney, prostate, bladder, stomach, cervix, brain, pancreas, colon, lung, liver, skin, and haematopoietic cancers [33, 34]. Angiotensin receptor-1 (ATR1) signalling appears to be the major component of RAAS involved in tumour growth (by inducing angiogenesis) and tumour proliferation (by promoting vascular or epidermal growth factor receptor expression) [33, 35]. ATR1 stimulates inflammation, fibrosis, angiogenesis, tumour invasion and metastasis, while ATR2 antagonize these effects [33, 35]. Angiotensin II can also promote cell growth and proliferation through the transforming growth factor-beta [36], tyrosine kinase [37], and activating mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathways [38]. Furthermore, a subpopulation of cancer cells known as cancer stem cells (CSCs) has been identified in many types of cancers [39]. These cells express components of the RAAS, supporting the intriguing hypothesis of paracrine mechanisms fostering carcinogenesis via stem cells [40]. The RAAS has a well-established pathogenetic role in HF [41, 42], promoting myocardial hypertrophy and fibrosis and adverse LV remodelling. Thus, enhanced RAAS activity in cancer patients might promote HF development.

Cardiac autonomic dysfunction

The possible occurrence of autonomic dysfunction in cancer is increasingly acknowledged. It is particularly prevalent among patients with advanced cancer and in those undergoing chemotherapy and radiotherapy, but studies suggest an increased prevalence among cancer patients compared to cancer-free individuals. Autonomic dysfunction could be related to preexisting neuropathy, paraneoplastic effects, tumour invasion or compression of autonomic nerves, cancer-related deconditioning, or autoimmune disorders [43-45]. Sustained activation of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) may contribute to cancer initiation [46] and progression [47]. It also influences the tumour microenvironment by promoting the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines [48, 49] and suppressing the immune response [50, 51]. SNS stimulation can also induce cancer cells to escape anoikis, a form of cell death occurring when cells detach from the extracellular matrix [52, 53]. High levels of tissue catecholamines can further promote tumour invasiveness by upregulating matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) [54, 55], thus increasing vascularisation and matrix degradation, which are the first steps toward metastatic dissemination [24, 56]. Finally, adrenergic stimulation recruits activated macrophages to the tumour parenchyma and induces a prometastatic gene expression signature [57]. These effects are largely mediated by beta-adrenergic receptors, particularly beta-2 adrenoreceptors, and may then be counteracted by beta-blockers [58]. Several preclinical studies show that adrenergic activation modulates apoptosis, promotes angiogenesis and other cancer hallmarks, which provide a rationale for the use of beta-blockers as antineoplastic and cardioprotective agents, and even as adjuvants to cancer chemotherapy [59, 60]. As in the case of RAAS activation, autonomic dysfunction due to cancer might promote the progression to HF. Increased sympathetic outflow and vagal withdrawal is a hallmark of HF [61], particularly HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), but also mid/range and HFpEF [62]. These changes are initially compensatory, but lead over time to maladaptive ventricular remodelling, hypertrophy, myocardial fibrosis, myocyte cell death, and further deterioration of cardiac function [63].

Clonal haematopoiesis

Clonal haematopoiesis (CH) is a proliferation of haematopoietic stem cells carrying somatic mutations [64]. These mutations occur predominantly in genes encoding for key epigenetic regulators of haematopoiesis [65, 66]. Some of these somatic mutations in the haematopoietic stem cells are linked to an increased risk of coronary artery disease [66, 67]. Other somatic mutations are associated with a poor prognosis in HF patients [68], with their modulation preventing the worsening of cardiac dysfunction in preclinical mouse models [69]. Accordingly, patients with CH have a higher risk of cancer, HF, and death than controls without mutations [70].

Oncometabolic pathways

Oncometabolites are molecules that accumulate in cancer cells, often through mutations of genes encoding the corresponding enzymes, which drive the activation of oncogenic pathways [71]. A preclinical study in rodents showed that an increased production of the oncometabolite D-2-hydroxyglutarate by mutant leukemic cells may reduce cardiac contractility by impairing oxidative decarboxylation of α-ketoglutarate and increasing ATP citrate lyase activity [8]. Similarly, results from genetically engineered and nude mice carrying tumours expressing mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase-2 (IDH2) suggest that D-2-hydroxyglutarate promote the development of cardiomyopathy [72]. An energy shift from mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation to aerobic glycolysis is often observed in cancer cells. This so-called Warburg effect has been extensively studied in cancer, but there is growing evidence of its involvement even in non-tumour diseases, including HF [73, 74]. A shift from the adult to the foetal isoforms of pyruvate kinase (PKM1 to PKM2) is a hallmark of the Warburg effect, with the latter causing accumulation of intermediates of the glycolytic pathway [75]. A high PKM2 expression has been found not only in cancer cells, but also in the failing hearts of patients with advanced HF, and is partially reversible through mechanical unloading [76].

Evidence of cardiac disease in cancer patients

Characterizing the effects of cancer on the heart requires the assessment of circulating biomarkers, imaging techniques, evaluation of functional capacity and autonomic function (Table 1).
Table 1

Subclinical markers of cardiac impairment in cancer patients

Parameter typeParameterPatients (number)Patient characteristics (age, sex, CV risk factors)CancerMain findingsCitation number
BiomarkersNT-proBNP145 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 malignanciesIn 80% of patients with NT-proBNP > 3000 ng/L, there was evidence of fluid overload[87]
hs-cTnT3.512 cancer survivors

Mean age 76 years

38% men, 62% women

Diabetes 30%,

Hypertension 70%

Different cancers, especially breast, prostate and colorectal cancerCancer survivors had significantly higher odds of elevated hs-cTnT[89]
NT-proBNP, MR-proANP, MR-proADM, CT-proET-1, copeptin, hsTnT, IL-6, CRP, SAA, haptoglobin, fibronectin555 treatment-naïve cancer patients

Mean age 62 years

40% men, 60% women

Hypertension 45%,

diabetes 8%, CVD 12%

Many types of cancerAll CV hormones and hs-TnT levels rose with tumour stage progression. All markers were independent predictors of mortality[92]
hs-TnT30 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

[88]
Exercise capacityVO2peak248

All women

Median age 55 ± 8 years

Breast cancerBreast cancer patients have marked impairment in VO2peak, which may be an independent predictor of survival in metastatic disease[111]
Automatic functionRHR548 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

[115]
HRV383 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[120]
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[91]

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

Subclinical markers of cardiac impairment in cancer patients Mean age 62.8 years 62% men, 38% women Median LVEF 52.5% Median NT-proBNP 7540 ng/L Mean age 76 years 38% men, 62% women Diabetes 30%, Hypertension 70% Mean age 62 years 40% men, 60% women Hypertension 45%, diabetes 8%, CVD 12% Median age 68 years 77% men, 23% women CAD 13%, Current/former smokers 90%, Overweight/obese 67%, Hypertension 43% 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 All women Median age 55 ± 8 years Median age 62 years 40.9% men, 32.7% women Hypertension 45%, diabetes 8%, CVD 5% ↑RHR display ↑ CV biomarkers RHR was associated with all-cause mortality, especially in lung and gastrointestinal cancers Median age 60.72 ± 11.82 years 71.5% men, 28.5% women 50 patients with CRC 51 with HF 51 controls Median age 59.9 ± 12.0 40% men, 60% women Hypertension, diabetes 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

Biomarkers

Laboratory markers can be used to assess a variety of pathophysiological processes in HF, such as fibrosis, inflammation, myocardial injury, and remodelling [77]. There is extensive literature on the role of cardiac biomarkers (particularly natriuretic peptides and high-sensitivity troponins [hs-Tn]) for the early detection of cardiotoxicity from cancer therapies [78-80]. Much less is known about circulating levels and prognostic value of biomarkers before the start of chemotherapy. Recent studies reported elevated levels of several biomarkers of myocardial injury and alterations of immunity and inflammatory pathways in treatment-naïve cancer patients [81-88]. A retrospective study in 145 patients with haematologic and solid organ malignancies not on treatment investigated the levels of N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP). There was evidence of fluid overload in 80% of patients with elevated NT-proBNP. The degree of NT-proBNP elevation was similar between patients with and without HF or volume overload and those with solid vs haematologic malignancies [87]. The role of high-sensitivity troponin (hs-Tn) levels to detect subclinical myocardial damage beyond conventional cardiovascular risk factors has been confirmed in a recent study, including 3512 individuals free from cardiovascular disease [89]. Cancer survivors (19% of the whole population) had significantly higher odds of elevated hs-TnT than patients without prior cancer (odds ratio [OR] 1.26; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.03–1.53). Furthermore, a significant increase of hs-TnI in 25 haematologic patients naïve from anthracycline therapy has been reported [90]. Overall, despite an association between increased NT-proBNP or hs-Tn, there is limited evidence of a link between this increase and alterations of cardiac structure or function in treatment-naïve cancer patients [91]. A prognostic role of biomarkers in this setting has also been proposed. In a study on 555 patients with a primary diagnosis of cancer and no prior therapies, several biomarkers (including NT-proBNP, hs-TnT, mid-regional proatrial natriuretic peptide, proadrenomedullin, copeptin, and interleukin 6) were shown to increase with tumour progression. All biomarkers predicted mortality regardless of age, gender, tumour entity and stage, and cardiac comorbidities [92]. Recently, hs-TnT before the start of treatment was reported to predict a composite endpoint of cardiovascular death, stroke or transient ischemic attack, pulmonary embolism and new-onset HF, as well as the progression of cardiac involvement at 3 months, in patients on immune checkpoint inhibitors, with 14 ng/L as the best cutoff [88]. In summary, patients with cancer can display an increase in cardiac biomarkers before the start of cancer therapies, and such increase might predict an increased risk of adverse outcome. However, further studies are needed to assess the prognostic role of other cardiac biomarkers, such as soluble suppression of tumorigenicity-2, galectin-3, or fibroblast growth factor-23.

Imaging findings

Echocardiography is the first-line imaging technique to assess cardiac structure and function. Although LV ejection fraction (LVEF) is the most commonly used parameter to detect cardiotoxic damage [79], speckle tracking imaging has emerged as a more sensitive marker of subclinical myocardial dysfunction [79, 93–95], with prognostic relevance in terms of prediction of manifest LV dysfunction [96-99]. Cramer et al. reported increased end-systolic volumes but similar diastolic function parameters in patients with evidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) before chemotherapy [91] compared with controls, but their analysis did not include advanced echocardiographic imaging. A retrospective study on 122 chemotherapy and radiotherapy-naive patients with cancer and 45 controls with similar cardiovascular risk profile showed that cancer, even before the initiation of therapy, was associated with reduced longitudinal (OR 9.0; 95% CI, 2.20–23.50; p < 0.001), circumferential (OR 7.1; 95% CI, 3.80–20.40; p < 0.001), and radial strain (OR 7.2; 95% CI, 3.41–25.10; p < 0.001) regardless of age, sex, body mass index, diabetes, and hypertension [100]. Similarly, cancer was independently associated with reduced right ventricle (RV) global longitudinal strain (OR 3.79; 95% CI, 2.18–10.92; p < 0.001), as well as with decreased free wall RV longitudinal strain (OR 5.73; 95% CI, 3.17–9.85; p < 0.001) [101]. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) allows a characterisation of myocardial tissue changes such as intracellular and interstitial oedema and fibrosis, which may represent early markers of myocardial injury [102]. T1- and T2-weighted imaging and T2 and T1 mapping sequences can help identify intracellular and interstitial oedema [103, 104]. CMR is then a valuable tool for early detection of cardiotoxicity by CMR [105-107]. There is currently no evidence of its prognostic value in chemotherapy and radiotherapy-naïve patients.

Exercise capacity

Several studies have reported a significant reduction of functional capacity in patients on chemotherapy or cancer survivors [108-110]. The functional implications of cardiorespiratory performance in untreated cancer patients, assessed through cardiopulmonary exercise testing, are less clear. A pilot study evaluated 248 patients with breast cancer before, during, and after adjuvant therapy for the non-metastatic disease, or during therapy for metastatic disease. Patients showed a marked reduction in peak oxygen consumption (VO2), especially those with metastatic disease, but also those before therapy, compared to patients after adjuvant therapy and age-matched sedentary healthy women. Peak VO2 was an independent predictor of survival, with an adjusted hazard ratio (HR) for death of 0.59 for a VO2 peak ≥ 15.4 mL/kg/min (95% CI, 0.29–1.19; p = 0.14) [111]. Overall, there is limited evidence of cardiac functional impairment of untreated cancer patients, and findings are basically limited to breast cancer patients.

Autonomic function

Resting heart rate has a strong association with cancer mortality [112-114]. In a study on 548 treatment-naïve cancer patients, higher resting heart rate was associated with higher NT-proBNP and hs-TnT, and predicted all-cause mortality over a median of 25 months after adjustment for age, gender, tumour type and stage, cardiac status, and haemoglobin (HR for each 5 beats per minute increase 1.10; 95% CI, 1.04–1.16; p < 0.001). The strongest associations with mortality were observed in lung and gastrointestinal cancer (p = 0.007 and p < 0.001, respectively) [115]. Assessment of heart rate variability (HRV), evaluated through ECG Holter monitoring, allows a more comprehensive evaluation of autonomic function. Reduced HRV denotes autonomic dysfunction with sympathetic activation and vagal withdrawal and portends a worse prognosis in several conditions, from cardiovascular to neurodegenerative diseases [116-118]. HRV is reduced in several cancer types [119], and decreased with advanced clinical stage and tumour progression (both p < 0.001) in patients with gastric cancer [120]. Cramer et al. prospectively studied 50 patients with CRC, 51 patients with HF, and 51 control subjects. Most metrics of HRV were significantly reduced in CRC patients and HF patients compared with control subjects (all p < 0.05). In summary, cancer patients have a higher heart rate and a reduced HRV, with clinical and prognostic implications.

Therapeutic perspectives

Several therapies with antifibrotic and antiremodelling effect (mainly RAAS antagonists), autonomic modulation (beta-blockers), and antiinflammatory or antioxidant actions [78, 80] have shown to prevent or relieve chemotherapy cardiotoxicity [121]. Exercise training seems also protective [110, 122, 123], for example reducing NT-proBNP increase and systolic dysfunction in breast cancer patient receiving doxorubicin [124] (Table 2).
Table 2

Cardioactive drugs and their effects on tumour progression

Drug testedStudyPatients (number, age, sex, CV risk factors)CancerMain findingsCitation

BB

ACEi

Retrospective cohort study

1779 women

60% > 55 years

Obesity 24%

Hypertension 32%

Diabetes 8%

Early-stage breast cancerBB exposure—↓ hazard of recurrence and cause-specific mortality. BB combined with ACEi—↓ HR for recurrence and cause-specific mortality than ACEi alone[139]

BB

ACEi

ARBs

Retrospective cohort study

18,733 women

Median age drug users, 62–63 years, non-users, 56–57 years

Non-metastatic breast cancerTwo BB were associated with increased recurrence rates. ACEi were associated with a slightly increased recurrence hazard. ARBs were not associated with recurrence[140]
BBMeta-analysis20,898 subjectsBreast, prostate, melanoma, ovarian cancerBB use can be associated with prolonged survival in cancer patients, especially patients with early-stage cancer primarily treated with surgery[131]
BBProof of concept study

466 female patients

Median age: hypertensive subgroup 57 years; non-hypertensive subgroup 54.5 years

Breast cancerBB treated patients showed a significant reduction in metastasis development, tumour recurrence, longer disease-free interval and reduction in breast cancer mortality after 10 years[125]
ARBsMeta-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 cancerARBs had a significantly increased risk of new cancer occurrence. No statistically significant difference in cancer deaths[136]
ACEi/ARBsMeta-analysis324,168 hypertensive patients from 70 randomised controlled trialsAny cancerNo difference in the risk of cancer with ARBs and ACEi. There was an increased risk with the combination of ACEi plus ARBs[137]
ACEi/ARBsMeta-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

[138]

ACEi Angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors, ARBs angiotensin-receptor blockers, BB beta-blockers, CV cardiovascular

Cardioactive drugs and their effects on tumour progression BB ACEi 1779 women 60% > 55 years Obesity 24% Hypertension 32% Diabetes 8% BB ACEi ARBs 18,733 women Median age drug users, 62–63 years, non-users, 56–57 years 466 female patients Median age: hypertensive subgroup 57 years; non-hypertensive subgroup 54.5 years 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) 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) 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

Beta-blockers

Patients on beta-blockers before cancer diagnosis tend to show a reduced disease progression and mortality [125-128]. Indeed, beta-blockers limit (mainly via beta-2-adrenergic receptors) inflammation and metastasis formation [59, 129]. Beta-blockers may then represent an adjuvant therapy strategy with a pleiotropic impact on the primary tumour, its microenvironment, and metastasis formation [128-130]. Powe et al. hypothesised a better outcome for breast cancer patients receiving a beta-blocker for hypertension. They evaluated 3 patient subgroups of 466 consecutive female patients (43 treated with beta-blockers, 49 with other antihypertensives, and 374 non-hypertensive control subgroup) with resectable breast cancer and follow-up of > 10 years. The endpoints were breast cancer survival, disease-free survival, formation of distant metastases, and local tumour recurrence. Patients on beta-blockers showed a significant reduction in metastasis development (p = 0.026), tumour recurrence (p = 0.001), and longer disease-free survival (p = 0.01). Furthermore, the risk of metastasis formation and breast cancer mortality at 10 years were reduced by 57% and 71%, respectively [125]. A recent meta-analysis of 12 studies and more than 20,000 patients reported that beta-blocker therapy is associated with improved overall survival (HR 0.79; 95% CI, 0.67–0.93; p = 0.004) and disease-free survival (HR 0.69; 95% CI, 0.53–0.91; p = 0.009). The effect size was greater, albeit not significantly different, in patients with low-stage cancer or cancer treated primarily with surgery [131].

RAAS inhibitors

Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEi) therapy was originally found to be independently associated with a decreased risk for cancer occurrence in a population-based study including hypertensive patients (HR 0.66; 95% CI, 0.63–0.68; p < 0.001) [132]. Studies on larger populations reported a lower cumulative incidence of cancer for angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) users (HR 0.58, 95% CI 0.55–0.62; p 0.001) [133, 134]. RAAS blockade has also been associated with better survival in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma [135]. Despite this, several meta-analyses have yielded conflicting results regarding the association between ARB therapy and the risk of new diagnosis of cancer [136-138]. A few studies investigated the effect of beta blockers and RAAS inhibitors. In the LACE Study cohort [women with early-stage breast cancer from the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Cancer Registry], including 1779 women (with 292 cancer recurrences, 174 cancer deaths, and 323 total deaths), 23% of patients were treated with either a beta-blocker and/or ACEi. These drugs were associated with older age, postmenopausal status, tamoxifen therapy, higher body mass index, hypertension, and diabetes. ACEi therapy was surprisingly associated with breast cancer recurrence (HR 1.56; 95% CI, 1.02–2.39; p = 0.04), but not cause-specific mortality or overall mortality. On the contrary, beta-blocker therapy was associated with a lower hazard of recurrence and cause-specific mortality (HR 0.86; 95% CI, 0.57–1.32; p = 0.49). However, there was no evidence of dose response with either medication. For recurrence and cause-specific mortality, therapy with a beta-blocker and an ACEi was associated with a lower HR for the outcome (HR 1.14 and 1.04, for the respective outcome) than when ACEi alone was used (HR 1.56 and 1.27, respectively) [139]. A further retrospective study including a large population of 18,733 women diagnosed with non-metastatic breast cancer between 1996 and 2003 showed that users of any beta-blocker had a lower recurrence hazard in unadjusted models (HR 0.91; 95% CI, 0.81–1.0) and a slightly higher recurrence hazard in adjusted models (adjusted HR 1.3; 95% CI, 1.1–1.5), with similar associations for exposures defined by receptor selectivity and solubility. Metoprolol and sotalol were associated with increased recurrence rates (adjusted HR: 1.5 metoprolol, 2.0 sotalol). ACEi were associated with a slightly increased recurrence hazard, whereas angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) were not associated with recurrence. The authors concluded that the study did not support the hypothesis that beta-blockers reduced the risk of breast cancer recurrence [140]. Retrospective cohort studies might have influenced these results, as there are no randomized controlled trials yet investigating this subject. Also, the studies used various beta blockers with different types of subjects in different tumour settings, leading to significant heterogeneity in the results.

Other drugs

Some other cardioactive drugs are currently under investigation: while treatment with diuretics does not seem to affect tumour incidence [141], the use of statins [142], aspirin [143], and metformin [144] seems to lead to a lower risk of death and tumour incidence.

Ongoing studies

Several ongoing studies are investigating the potential implementation of beta-blockers in this specific setting (notably propranolol and carvedilol) [7]. Although various studies have suggested that ACEi/ARB have antiproliferative effects and improve survival of many types of cancers, there are also reports of increased cancer risk: because of contradictory findings from meta-analyses, the exact relationship between RAAS blockade and development of cancer and cancer subtypes remains uncertain and more studies (longitudinal prospective cohort; randomized clinical trials) are needed to demonstrate the effects of RAAS blockade in cancer, and in this setting, large randomized controlled trials are mandatory.

Conclusions

Cancer itself might be considered as a condition at risk of HF and, as such, susceptible to cardioprotective therapies even before the introduction of chemotherapy. Such primary prevention strategies would allow to avoid further complications and better risk stratify cancer patients, but, on the other hand, they imply greater risk of side effects, closer monitoring, and higher cost (Fig. 2). Overall, there are promising results from primary prevention trials investigating the cardioprotective efficacy of neurohormonal therapies [145-151]. Breast cancer patients treated with neurohormonal therapies show higher LVEF and better LV strain [121]. However, these trials have highly heterogeneous designs. The small sample size, short follow-up durations, and single-centred design highlight the need for multicentre, adequately powered randomized controlled trials. Longer follow-up duration and clinically meaningful endpoints are also required [121, 152].
Fig. 2

Potential 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

Potential 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 Therefore, patients candidate for chemotherapy should be considered at risk of developing HF (stage A), and subclinical HF (stage B) that should be actively searched, to Initiate early an appropriate treatment and improve patient outcome.
  151 in total

1.  Use of β-blockers is associated with prostate cancer-specific survival in prostate cancer patients on androgen deprivation therapy.

Authors:  Helene Hartvedt Grytli; Morten Wang Fagerland; Sophie D Fosså; Kristin Austlid Taskén; Lise Lund Håheim
Journal:  Prostate       Date:  2012-07-20       Impact factor: 4.104

Review 2.  Oncometabolites: A New Paradigm for Oncology, Metabolism, and the Clinical Laboratory.

Authors:  Rebecca R J Collins; Khushbu Patel; William C Putnam; Payal Kapur; Dinesh Rakheja
Journal:  Clin Chem       Date:  2017-10-16       Impact factor: 8.327

3.  Detailed Echocardiographic Phenotyping in Breast Cancer Patients: Associations With Ejection Fraction Decline, Recovery, and Heart Failure Symptoms Over 3 Years of Follow-Up.

Authors:  Hari K Narayan; Brian Finkelman; Benjamin French; Theodore Plappert; David Hyman; Amanda M Smith; Kenneth B Margulies; Bonnie Ky
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2017-01-19       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Prediction of Ischemic Heart Disease and Stroke in Survivors of Childhood Cancer.

Authors:  Eric J Chow; Yan Chen; Melissa M Hudson; Elizabeth A M Feijen; Leontien C Kremer; William L Border; Daniel M Green; Lillian R Meacham; Daniel A Mulrooney; Kirsten K Ness; Kevin C Oeffinger; Cécile M Ronckers; Charles A Sklar; Marilyn Stovall; Helena J van der Pal; Irma W E M van Dijk; Flora E van Leeuwen; Rita E Weathers; Leslie L Robison; Gregory T Armstrong; Yutaka Yasui
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-11-02       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Cardiac troponin I in patients with hematologic malignancies.

Authors:  E Missov; C Calzolari; J M Davy; F Leclercq; M Rossi; B Pau
Journal:  Coron Artery Dis       Date:  1997 Aug-Sep       Impact factor: 1.439

6.  Autonomic nerve development contributes to prostate cancer progression.

Authors:  Claire Magnon; Simon J Hall; Juan Lin; Xiaonan Xue; Leah Gerber; Stephen J Freedland; Paul S Frenette
Journal:  Science       Date:  2013-07-12       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Effect of daily aspirin on long-term risk of death due to cancer: analysis of individual patient data from randomised trials.

Authors:  Peter M Rothwell; F Gerald R Fowkes; Jill F F Belch; Hisao Ogawa; Charles P Warlow; Tom W Meade
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2010-12-06       Impact factor: 79.321

8.  Reactive oxygen species: role in the development of cancer and various chronic conditions.

Authors:  Gulam Waris; Haseeb Ahsan
Journal:  J Carcinog       Date:  2006-05-11

Review 9.  Common risk factors for heart failure and cancer.

Authors:  Wouter C Meijers; Rudolf A de Boer
Journal:  Cardiovasc Res       Date:  2019-04-15       Impact factor: 10.787

Review 10.  Conversion of Stem Cells to Cancer Stem Cells: Undercurrent of Cancer Initiation.

Authors:  Said M Afify; Masaharu Seno
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2019-03-11       Impact factor: 6.639

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  1 in total

Review 1.  Bidirectional Relationship Between Cancer and Heart Failure: Insights on Circulating Biomarkers.

Authors:  Michela Chianca; Giorgia Panichella; Iacopo Fabiani; Alberto Giannoni; Serena L'Abbate; Alberto Aimo; Annamaria Del Franco; Giuseppe Vergaro; Chrysanthos Grigoratos; Vincenzo Castiglione; Carlo Maria Cipolla; Antonella Fedele; Claudio Passino; Michele Emdin; Daniela Maria Cardinale
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2022-07-06
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