| Literature DB >> 35865379 |
Caroline Schneider1,2, Nathalia González-Jaramillo2,3, Thimo Marcin1, Kristin L Campbell4, Thomas Suter1, Arjola Bano1,3, Matthias Wilhelm1, Prisca Eser1.
Abstract
Background and Aims: Anthracycline-based chemotherapy (ANTH-BC) has been proposed to increase arterial stiffness, however, the time-dependency of these effects remain unclear. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to investigate the time-dependent effect of ANTH-BC on markers of central aortic stiffness, namely aortic distensibility (AD) and pulse-wave-velocity (PWV) in cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: aortic distensibility; breast cancer; lymphoma; pulse-wave-velocity; vasculotoxicity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35865379 PMCID: PMC9295862 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2022.873898
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
FIGURE 1Flowchart for study inclusion, adapted from the PRISMA statement. Flow chart illustrating the study search, screening and selection processes.
Description of the included studies.
| Source | Cancer type (%) | Age | Cumulative dose (mg/m2) | Sample size n (% female) | Outcome assessment | Baseline | Follow-up | Baseline | Follow-up | CV risk factors |
| Novo et al. ( | Breast cancer | 56 ± 12 | NA | 133 (100%) | Carotid arteries ultrasound | Median (IQR): | Median (IQR): | Diabetes (13.5%) | ||
| Mihalcea et al. ( | Lymphoma (non-Hodgkin) | 58 ± 11 | 8 ± 2 cycles of Doxorubicin at 50 mg/m2= | 110 (54%) | Echo right common carotid artery, | 6.7 ± 1.1 | 3rd cycle | Diabetes (4%) | ||
| Turan et al. ( | Lymphoma (non-Hodgkin) | 52 (36–68) | 6 cycles of Doxorubicin | 10 (80%) | SphygmoCor system (AtCor Medical, Sydney, Australia) | Median (min-max): 9.08 | First cycle: | Hypertension (20%) Dyslipidemia, (20%) | ||
| Chaosuwannakit et al. ( | Breast cancer (48%) | 52 ± 11 | Doxorubicin | Cancer: 40 (70%) | CMR | 6.9 ± 2.3 | 3.6 months: | 4.1 ± 1.6 | 3.6 months: | Diabetes (13%) |
| Grover et al. ( | Breast cancer | 54 ± 11 | 3–6 cycles of Epirubicin at 100 mg/m2 = 300–600 | 27 (100%) | CMR | 6.8 ± 3.2 | 1 month: | Anth-group only: | All patients, | Diabetes (15%) |
| Drafts et al. ( | Breast cancer (42%) | 50 ± 2 | Doxorubicin in 37 patients: 240; 50- 375 | 53 (58%) | PC-CMR | 6.7 ± 0.5 | 6 months: | Diabetes (13%) | ||
| Mizia- Stec et al. ( | Breast cancer (100%) | 50 ± 9 | Doxorubicin: 278 ± 55; 100–300 | 31 (100%) | Echo | 16.7 ± 11.8 | 9–12 months: |
|
| Controlled hypertension: 52% |
| Daskalaki et al. ( | Lymphoma | 44 ± 19 | Doxorubicin | 70 (47%) | Echo | 3.31 ± 0.27 | 3 months: | Currently smoking: 11% | ||
| Jordan et al. | ANTH-BC: Breast cancer (44%) | 51 ± 12 | Doxorubicin: | ANTH-BC: 61 (69%) | PC-CMR | 1.68 ± 1.31 | 6 months: | ANTH-BC patients: |
*Non ANTH-BC group: breast cancer patients treated with trastuzumab regimen with either Docetaxel or Taxol (n=13) and patients treated for a hematologic malignancy with either all Transretinoic acid (n=1) or Bendamustine/Rituxan therapy (n=1) ACE, angiotensin-converting–enzyme; AD, aortic distensibility; ANTH-BC, anthracycline-based chemotherapy; ARBs, angiotensin-receptor blockers; CAD, coronary artery disease; CV, cardiovascular PC-CMR, phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance; PWV, pulse- wave- velocity; TZM, trastuzumab.
FIGURE 2Graphical illustration of time-dependent adverse effects on arterial stiffness with ANTH-BC relative to baseline values; AD, aortic distensibility; PWV, pulse-wave-velocity.
Quality assessment of included studies using the NIH.
| Criteria | Chaosu-wannakit | Drafts | Grover | Jordan | Daska-laki | Mizia-Stec | Mihalcea | Novo |
| 1. Was the study question or objective clearly stated? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 2. Were eligibility/selection criteria for the study population prespecified and clearly described? | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 3. Were the participants in the study representative of those who would be eligible for the test/service/intervention in the general or clinical population of interest? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| 4. Were all eligible participants that met the prespecified entry criteria enrolled? | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. |
| 5. Was the sample size sufficiently large to provide confidence in the findings? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 6. Was the intervention (ANTH-BC) clearly described and delivered consistently across the study population? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | n.r. | Yes | Yes | n.r. |
| 7. Were the outcome measures prespecified, clearly defined, valid, reliable, and assessed consistently across all study participants? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 8. Were the people assessing the outcomes blinded to the participants’ exposures/interventions? | Yes | Yes | n.r. | Yes | Yes | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. |
| 9. Was the loss to follow-up after baseline 20% or less? Were those lost to follow-up accounted for in the analysis? | n.r. | n.r. | Yes | n.r. | Yes | Yes | No (loss more than 20%, baseline: 147, final assessment 110) | n.r. |
| 10. Did the statistical methods examine changes in outcome measures from before to after the intervention? Were statistical tests done that provided p values for the pre-to-post changes? | Yes, but method n.r. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 11. Were outcome measures of interest taken multiple times before the intervention and multiple times after the intervention (i.e., did they use an interrupted time-series design)? | No | No | No | No | No | No | No (once before intervention, but twice after (3rd and last cycle) | No |
| 12. If the intervention was conducted at a group level (e.g., a whole hospital, a community, etc.) did the statistical analysis take into account the use of individual-level data to determine effects at the group level? | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Quality assessment tool for before-after (pre-post) studies with no control group.
The colours represent the quality of the studies included in this meta-analysis with red for high risk, yellow for uncertain and green for low risk of bias.
FIGURE 3Effect of ANTH-BC on AD. Forest plots illustrating the effect of ANTH-BC on AD divided by time-point of assessment into (A) short-term (3–4 months) and (B) mid-term (6–12 months) effects.
FIGURE 4Effect of ANTH-BC on PWV. Forest plot illustrating the effect of ANTH-BC on PWV divided by time-point of assessment into (A) short-term (2–4 months, corresponding to subgroup analysis for CMR) and (B) mid-term (6–12 months) effects.