| Literature DB >> 35268333 |
Natalia Fabin1, Maria Bergami1, Edina Cenko1, Raffaele Bugiardini1, Olivia Manfrini1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases and cancer are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally. Cardiotoxicity from chemotherapeutic agents results in substantial morbidity and mortality in cancer survivors and patients with active cancer. Cardiotoxicity induced by 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) has been well established, yet its incidence, mechanisms, and manifestation remain poorly defined. Ischemia secondary to coronary artery vasospasm is thought to be the most frequent cardiotoxic effect of 5-FU. The available evidence of 5-FU-induced epicardial coronary artery spasm and coronary microvascular dysfunction suggests that endothelial dysfunction or primary vascular smooth muscle dysfunction (an endothelial-independent mechanism) are the possible contributing factors to this form of cardiotoxicity. In patients with 5-FU-related coronary artery vasospasm, termination of chemotherapy and administration of nitrates or calcium channel blockers may improve ischemic symptoms. However, there are variable results after administration of nitrates or calcium channel blockers in patients treated with 5-FU presumed to have myocardial ischemia, suggesting mechanisms other than impaired vasodilatory response. Clinicians should investigate whether chest pain and ECG changes can reasonably be attributed to 5-FU-induced cardiotoxicity. More prospective data and clinical randomized trials are required to understand and mitigate potentially adverse outcomes from 5-FU-induced cardiotoxicity.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cardio-oncology; cardiotoxicity; fluoropyrimidines; ischemic heart disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35268333 PMCID: PMC8910913 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11051244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Summary of studies evaluating the incidence of coronary vasospasm in patients treated with 5-FU.
| Author [Reference] | Sample Size, | Study Design | Fluoropyrimidine Type | Overall Incidence of 5-FU Induced Cardiotoxicity, % | Presentation of Cardiotoxicity | Coronary Angiography/Ventriculography |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polk et al. [ | 2236 | Retrospective | 5-FU or capecitabine | 4.6% |
Chest pain Myocardial infarction Cardiac arrest Sudden death Heart failure |
Angiography performed in 24 patients: 13% had obstructive CAD Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
| Polk et al. [ | 452 | Retrospective | 5-FU | 4.9% |
Chest pain Myocardial infarction Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviation followed by T waves abnormalities) ECG changes or arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation, QTc prolongation) Dyspnoea Cardiac arrest | N/A |
| Abdel-Rahman et al. [ | 3223 | Pooled analysis of five RCT | 5-FU | 7.9% |
Chest pain Myocardial infarction ECG changes or arrhythmias (Atrial flutter, Atrial fibrillation, AV-block, BBB, Ventricular arrhythmias) | N/A |
| Peng et al. [ | 527 | Retrospective | 5-FU or capecitabine | 30.6% |
Chest pain Myocardial infarction Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviations/ T wave abnormalities) ECG changes or arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation, conduction blocks) Heart failure | N/A |
| Kwakman et al. [ | 1973 | Pooled analysis analysis of three RCTs | Capecitabine | 5.9% |
Chest pain Myocardial injury/infarction Myocardial infarction ECG changes or arrhythmias (Atrial fibrillation, AV block, Ventricular fibrillation) Heart failure | N/A |
| Tsibiribi et al. [ | 1350 | Prospective | 5-FU | 1.2% |
Chest pain Myocardial infarction | N/A |
| Akhtar et al. [ | 100 | Prospective | 5-FU | 8% |
Chest pain ECG changes Cardiogenic shock | N/A |
| Keefe et al. [ | 910 | Prospective | 5-FU | 0.55% |
Chest pain Myocardial infarction ST-elevation Ventricular arrhythmias Cardiac arrest | N/A |
| de Forni et al. [ | 367 | Prospective | 5-FU | 7.6% |
Chest pain Unstable angina Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviation; T-wave inversion) Sudden death Arrhythmias Dyspnea | N/A |
| Jeremic et al. [ | 80 | Prospective | 5-FU and cisplatin | 15% |
Chest pain Ischemic ECG changes (ST-T wave abnormalities) Arrhythmias | N/A |
| Eskilsson et al. [ | 76 | Prospective | 5-FU (Continuous infusion) and cisplatin | 18% |
Chest pain ECG changes or arrhythmias (Atrial fibrillation, ventricular fibrillation) Sudden death | N/A |
| Labianca et al. [ | 1083 | Retrospective | 5-FU | 1.6% |
Chest pain Myocardial infarction | N/A |
| Pottage et al. [ | 140 | Prospective | 5-FU | 2.9% |
Chest pain ST segment deviation; T-wave inversion Myocardial Infarction | N/A |
| Ng et al. [ | 153 | Pooled analysis of two prospective trials | Capecitabine and oxaliplatin | 6.5% |
Chest pain at rest Chest pain during exertion Elevated troponins Ischemic ECG changes (ST-depression, Q waves, T waves abnormalities) ECG changes or arrhythmias (Ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation) Sudden cardiac death Heart failure | One patient |
| Meyer et al. [ | 483 | Prospective | 5-FU | 1.9% |
Chest pain ECG changes or arrhythmias (bradycardia, tachycardia, RBBB, PVCs) Hypotension Hypertension Dyspnea | N/A |
| Wacker et al. [ | 102 | Prospective | 5-FU | 19% |
Chest pain with ECG changes Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviation) ECG changes or arrhythmias (bradycardia, PVCs, Prolonged QTc) | Six patients: All non-obstructive CAD Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
| Jensen et al. [ | 668 | Retrospective | 5-FU or capecitabine | 4.3% | Chest pain | N/A |
| Khan et al. [ | 301 | Retrospective | 5-FU | 19.9% |
Chest pain Elevated biomarkers of myocardial necrosis Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviation, T wave changes) ECG changes or arrhythmias (Bradycardia, AV block, Ventricular tachycardia) Cardiac arrest Hypotension Hypertension Heart failure | N/A |
| Rezkalla et al. [ | 25 | Prospective | 5-FU | 24% |
Chest pain at rest during infusion Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviation during infusion) Sudden death | N/A |
| Zafar et al. [ | 4019 | Retrospective | 5-FU | 2.2% |
Chest pain Elevated troponins (conventional or high sensitivity) Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviation, T wave changes) Dyspnea Syncope | N/A |
| Kosmas et al. [ | 644 | Prospective | 5-FU and oral capecitabine | 4.03% |
Chest pain/discomfort Ischemic ECG changes (ST-deviation, T wave changes) with or without raised biomarkers of myocardial necrosis ECG changes or arrhythmias (PVCs, AV blocks) Malaise, diaphoresis Syncope | N/A |
| Meydan et al. [ | 231 | Prospective | 5-FU | 3.9% |
Unstable angina Myocardial infarction Pericarditis Congestive heart failure Atrial fibrillation | N/A |
| Eskilsson et al. [ | 58 | Prospective | 5-FU | 14% |
Chest pain Ischemic ECG changes (ST-segment elevation followed by T-wave inversion) ECG changes or arrhythmias (Ectopic atrial rhythm, Prolonged PR interval) | N/A |
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| Lestuzzi et al. [ | 3 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain during effort with ECG changes (ST-elevation/-depression; negative T waves) | N/A |
| Luwaert et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain at rest, with ST-segment elevation in leads I.aVL, V4-6, and II,III,aVF |
Non-obstructive CAD Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
| Henry et al. [ | 1 | Case report | Capecitabine | 100% |
Chest pain during effort | N/A |
| Kleiman et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain with ECG changes (ST segment elevation) and PVCs | N/A |
| Suresh et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain at rest during infusion |
Non-obstructive CAD Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
| Frickhofen et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain with ECG changes (negative T-waves in leads AVL, I and V4–V6), unresponsive to treatment Recurring chest pain with ECG changes (ST- elevations in leads I, II, AVL, AVF and V3–V6), unresponsive to treatment |
Non-obstructive CAD Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
| Clasen et al. [ | 11 | Case series | 5-FU | 100% |
Persistent chest pain and ischemic ECG changes (ST- elevation) Intermittent and recurrent chest pain |
4 patients: 3 patients had evidence of non-obstructive CAD; 1 patient had evidence of flow limiting stenosis on RCA requiring stent apposition 3 patients had coronary CT scans with no evidence of CAD or coronary calcification Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
| Alter et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU and cisplatin | 100% |
Chest pain during infusion of 5-FU relieved by treatment discontinuation Evidence of ischemia in septal, infero-septal and in the inferior wall on SPECT |
Non-obstructive CAD Diffuse spams of the circumflex artery on cold pressor test during angiography reversed by coronary vasodilators |
| Arbea et al. [ | 1 | Case report | Oxaliplatin and oral capecitabine | 100% |
Chest pain at rest Chest pain with ECG and stress echocardiography abnormalities (ST-elevation in precordial and inferior leads and akinesia and severe hypokinesia in the territory of the RCA and LAD) |
Non-obstructive CAD No evidence of inducible epicardial vasospasm during ergonovine testing |
| Klag et al. [ | 1 | Case report | Capecitabine | 100% |
Acute chest pain Elevated troponins ST-elevation Dyspnea |
Non-obstructive CAD Apical dyskinesia with typical apical ballooning and systolic dysfunction Acetylcholine-induced diffuse vasospasm of the LAD, reversed by coronary vasodilators |
| Kim et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Acute chest pain ST-elevation in lateral leads |
Significant atherosclerosis in the proximal left circumflex artery requiring DES apposition Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
| Yuan et al. [ | 2 | Case series | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain Raised biomarkers of myocardial necrosis Ischemic ECG changes (hyperacute T waves, new LBBB) Left ventricular EF≤25% with severe hypokinesia Dyspnea |
Coronary CT revealed normal coronaries with no stenosis. |
| Yildirim et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain ST-depression | N/A |
| Patel et al. [ | 7 | Case series | 5-FU | 100% |
Chest pain Ischemic ECG changes (new Q waves, ST-elevation/depression) Ventricular tachycardia Cardiac arrest Hypotension Left ventricular dysfunction | N/A |
| Akpek et al. [ | 1 | Case report | 5-FU | 100% |
Recurrent chest pain during infusions relieved by treatment discontinuation and vasodilators Ischemic ECG changes (ST-elevation followed by T-wave inversion) |
Normal coronary arteries at coronary angiography Coronary spasm was not documented at coronary angiography |
Abbreviations: 5-FU = 5- fluorouracil; AV = atrioventricular; BBB = Bundle branch block; CAD = coronary artery disease; CT = computed tomography; ECG = electrocardiography; EF = ejection fraction; LAD = left anterior descending artery; LBBB = left bundle branch block; PVCs = premature ventricular contractions; RBBB = right bundle branch block; RCA = right coronary artery; SPECT = single photon emission computed tomography.