Superiority of left heart deformation in early anthracycline-related cardiac dysfunction detection

Objective This study aimed to assess the incidence of early cancer therapy-related cardiac dysfunction (CTRCD) and the characteristics of left and right heart deformations during anthracycline chemotherapy.Methods We prospectively enrolled a cohort of 351 chemotherapy-naïve women with breast cancer...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nhat Giang M, Hai Nguyen H, Duc Tan Vo, Tri Ho Huynh Quang, Duc Thi Hong Phan, Ngoc-Hoa Chau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2023-11-01
Series:Open Heart
Online Access:https://openheart.bmj.com/content/10/2/e002493.full
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Summary:Objective This study aimed to assess the incidence of early cancer therapy-related cardiac dysfunction (CTRCD) and the characteristics of left and right heart deformations during anthracycline chemotherapy.Methods We prospectively enrolled a cohort of 351 chemotherapy-naïve women with breast cancer and cardiovascular risk factors who were scheduled to receive anthracycline. The left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), left ventricular global longitudinal strain (LV-GLS) and right ventricular and left atrial longitudinal strains were evaluated using echocardiography at baseline, before every subsequent cycles and at 3 weeks after the final anthracycline dose. CTRCD was defined as a new LVEF reduction by ≥10 percentage points to an LVEF<50% and/or a new relative decline in GLS by >15% from the baseline value.Results Eighteen (5.1%) patients had evidence of asymptomatic CTRCD during anthracycline treatment, and 50% developed CTRCD before completing the chemotherapy regimen. In the CTRCD group, while LV-GLS decrease significantly after the first dose of anthracycline, the reduction of right ventricular free-wall longitudinal strain and left atrial reservoir strain were observed after the second dose. Other strain indices could not be used to identify early CTRCD.Conclusions Cardiotoxicity appeared soon after the initiation of anthracycline chemotherapy. Among the left-heart and right-heart mechanics, LV-GLS remains the best deformation indicator for detecting early CTRCD.
ISSN:2053-3624