| Literature DB >> 36005409 |
Jonica Campolo1, Giuseppe Annoni2, Marzia Giaccardi3, Maria Grazia Andreassi4.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies have shown an increased prevalence of cancer in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) as compared with the general population. The underlying risk factors for the acquired cancer risk remain poorly understood, and shared genetic anomalies and cumulative radiation exposure from repeated imaging and catheterization procedures may be contributing factors. In the present review, we provide an update on the most recent literature regarding the associations between CHD and cancer, with a particular focus on genetic etiology and radiation exposure from medical procedures. The current evidence indicates that children with CHD may be a high-risk population, already having the first genetic "hit", and, consequently, may have increased sensitivity to ionizing radiation from birth or earlier. Future research strategies integrating biological and molecular measures are also discussed in this article.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; congenital heart disease; genetics; ionizing radiation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36005409 PMCID: PMC9409914 DOI: 10.3390/jcdd9080245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ISSN: 2308-3425
Previous studies on the association between CHD and cancer.
| Study | Subjects | Design | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Olsen M, et al., 2014, [ | 15,905 CHD children/young born from 1977 to 2008; 801 with Down | Register-based study. | Increased cancer risk in CHD cohort (SIR 1.63, 95%CI: 1.22–2.13). No |
| Lee YS, et al., 2015, [ | 31,961 children/young adults, newly diagnosed from 1998 to 2006. Data sources: Taiwan National Health | Population-based cohort study. | Increased cancer risk in CHD (SIR 1.45, 95%CI 1.25–1.67), particularly |
| Gurvitz M, et al., 2016, [ | 34,965 CHD adults alive in 2005. Data sources: Quebec Congenital Heart | Population-based cohort study. | Twofold increased cancer prevalence in CHD compared to general |
| Collins II RT, et al., 2018, [ | 65,585 children with structural birth defects born from 1988 to 2004; 25,981 with CHD but without chromosomal anomalies. Data sources: California Birth Defects Monitoring Program | Population-based cohort study. | Increased cancer risk in CHD |
| Mandalenakis Z, et al. 2019, [ | 21,982 CHD and 219,816 without CHD born from 1970 to 1993. Data sources: Swedish Patient Register. | Registry-based | Increased cancer risk in CHD compared to controls (HR 2.24, 95% CI 2.01–2.48), higher among CHD from the most |
| Karazisi C, et al., 2022, [ | 89,542 CHD and 890,472 controls | Register-based study. | The overall cancer risk is 23% higher in CHD compared to controls and 18% higher excluding those with syndromes and organ transplant recipients. The highest cancer risk was found in CHD cohort aged 0–17 years. |
| Kampitsi et al., 2022, [ | 4,178,722 children born between 1973 and 2014; 66,892 CHD subjects. Data sources: Swedish Medical Birth | Population-based cohort study. | Increased risks of lymphomas and hepatoblastomas in CHD, even |
CHD, congenital heart diseases; HR, hazard ratio; SIR, standardized incident ratio.
Average radiation dose for common ionizing procedures in CHD patients.
| Procedure | Effective Dose (mSv) | Equivalent CXRs |
|---|---|---|
| Chest X-ray | 0.02 | 1 |
| Diagnostic catheterization | 6.0 | 300 |
| Patent ductus arteriosus occlusion | 7.6 | 360 |
| Closure of atrial septal defect | 2.8 | 280 |
| Aortic coarctation | 6.8 | 340 |
| Balloon valvuloplasty | 8.1 | 410 |
| Electrophysiological study | 3.2 | 160 |
| Regular PM or ICD implant | 4 | 200 |
| Ablation procedure | 15.2 | 760 |
From references [28,29,30,31,32]. CXRs, chest X-rays; mSv, millisievert.
Previous studies on the association among CHD, cancer, and radiation exposure.
| Study | Subjects | Design | Exposure Assessment | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spengler RF, et al., 1983, [ | 4891 CHD children assessed by CC during 1946 to 1968. Data sources: records from the | A retrospective cohort study. | Estimation of radiation exposure per CC. | No excess of cancer mortality in children who underwent CC. |
| McLaughlin JR, et al., 1993, [ | 3915 children < 18 years at the time of procedure who | Monocenter | Number | No risk of cancer among the cohort and no association between |
| Modan B, et al., 2000, [ | 674 children with congenital anomalies who underwent CC between 1950–1970. | Multicenter | Number of | Increased risk of all cancers (SIR = 2.3; 95% CI: 1.2–4.1); lymphomas the most relevant. No dose–response |
| Harbron RW, et al., 2018, [ | 11,270 CHD patients who | Multicenter | Number of CC and CT procedures. Estimated cumulative organ doses for CC and CT procedures. | Higher cancer rate in CHD |
| Cohen S, et al., 2018, [ | 24,833 CHD adult patients (18 to 64 years); 602 cancer cases. Patients with genetic disorders were excluded. Data sources: Quebec Congenital Heart Disease Database. | Retrospective, | Cumulative LDIR | Cumulative cancer incidence in CHD was 15.3% (95% CI, 14.2–16.5). Cases had more LDIR-related |
| Stern H, et al., 2020, [ | 2770 CHD children who underwent CC under 1 year of age between 1980–1998. | Retrospective single-center | Effective radiation doses. | Increased cancer risk (SIR 4.4 95%CI: 2.5–7.2) in CHD in the first year of life. No significant association was found between cancers and effective radiation doses. |
| Abalo KD, et al., 2021, [ | 17,104 CHD patients (<16 years) at first CC between 2000–2013. Data sources: | Multicenter | Number of CC | Increased SIRs in CHD for all-cancer, leukemia, lymphoma, and solid cancers compared to |
CHD, congenital heart diseases; CC, cardiac catheterization; SIR, standardized incidence ratio; NHS, national health service; CT, computed tomography; LDIR, low-dose ionizing radiation.
Figure 1Molecular epidemiology may overcome some major limitations of traditional epidemiology and provide insights into disease causation. Validated biomarkers of effects can help to delineate the continuum of events between exposure and resulting cancer by identifying early changes in the natural history of cancer process.
Figure 2Illustration of unifying model for understanding the relationship between CHD, radiation exposure, and cancer. This model supports the notion that germline variations in CHD increase the susceptibility of induced DNA mutations.