CARDIOONCOLOGY Flashcards
evolution of needs for cardio-oncology
- based on the emergence of cardiology problems in cancer patients from cancer drugs
- occurs in up to 1/4 of all cancer patients
- most serious: HF, cardiac dysfunction
9 main categories of cardiovascular complications of cancer therapy
- myocardial dysfunction and heart failure (HF)
- coronary artery disease (CAD)
- valvular disease
- arrhythmias
- arterial hypertension
- thromboembolic disease
- peripheral vascular disease and stroke
- pulmonary hypertension
- pericardial complications
predicting risk and factors in cardiotoxicity
- cardiac toxicity susceptibility
- predictive biomarkers
- early interventions
- better management
- patient centred studies across the continuum of care
- choose not to treat with X
anthracycline toxicity
inter-related molecular mechanisms for cardiotoxic effects (doxorubicin)
1. generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and membrane damage
2. inhibition of topoisomerase II-b (TOP2B) and topoisomerase I mitochondrial
3. modulation of intracellular calcium release
antineoplastic drugs
classified into type 1 and 2 depending on the chemotherapy-induced toxicity
anthracyclines belong to type 1 agents and cause irreversible and dose-dependent damage which consists of cellular death, either via necrosis or apoptosis
dexrazoxane is the only FDA-approved drug for preventing anthracycline-induced cytotoxicity
dexrazoxane moa
- cyclic derivative of EDTA that penetrates cell membranes
- may be converted intracellularly to a ring-opened chelating agent that interferes with iron-mediated free radical generation thought to be responsible for anthracycline induced cardiomyopathy
- dexrazoxane prevents doxorubicin from binding to the Top2-beta-DNA complex by trapping Top2Beta in a closed clamp form, this inhibits the formation of DNA breaks leading to cell damage
Herceptin and cardiotoxicity
- cardiac toxicity as a side effect of trastuzumab treatment
- highly effective for EPFR HER2+ breast cancer but is associated with a decline in left ventricular ejection fraction
- a higher cardiac risk when treated in combination with doxorubicin
neuregulin
- in the heart, neuregulin (NRG-1) triggers HER-4/HER-4-homo-dimerisation and HER-4/HER-2-heterodimerisation on cardiomyocytes to induce protective pathways in response to stress
- blockade of cardiac HER-2 by Herceptin results in disruption of NEG signalling and results in cardiomyocyte dysfunction and death