Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Body Surface Area and Baseline Blood Pressure Predict Subclinical Anthracycline Cardiotoxicity in Women Treated for Early Breast Cancer

Paul Kotwinski, Gillian Smith, Jackie A. Cooper, Julie Sanders, Louise Ma, Albert Teis, David Kotwinski, Michael G. Mythen, Dudley J. Pennell, Alison Jones, Hugh Montgomery, on behalf of the Breast cancer Early disease: Toxicity from Therapy with Epirubicin Regimens–Cardiac Assessment and Risk Evaluation (BETTER-CARE) Study Investigators

PLoS ONE · 2016

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Summary

We found subclinical cardiotoxicity to be common even within this low risk cohort. Risk of cardiotoxicity was associated with modestly elevated baseline blood pressure-indicating that close attention should be paid to blood pressure in patients considered for anthracycline based chemotherapy. The association with higher body surface area suggests that indexing of anthracycline doses to surface area may not be appropriate for all, and points to the need for additional research in this area.

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0165262
Catalogue ID
BFmoakvpzf-k57de7
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