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

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Anthracyclines are highly effective chemotherapeutic agents which may cause long-term cardiac damage (chronic anthracycline cardiotoxicity) and heart failure. The pathogenesis of anthracycline cardiotoxicity remains incompletely understood and individual susceptibility difficult to predict. We sought clinical features which might contribute to improved risk assessment. METHODS: Subjects were women with early breast cancer, free of pre-existing cardiac disease. Left ventricular ejection fraction was measured using cardiovascular magnetic resonance before and >12 months after anthracycline-based chemotherapy (>3 months post-Trastuzumab). Variables associated with subclinical cardiotoxicity (defined as a fall in left ventricular ejection fraction of ≥5%) were identified b

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0165262
Catalogue ID
BFmokjo2bz-j8shn4
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