DOI: 10.1161/circ.148.suppl_1.12735 ISSN: 0009-7322

Abstract 12735: Investigating Cardiac Function After Anthracycline Exposure in Childhood Cancer Survivors With Modifiable Cardiovascular Risk Factors

BriAnna M Souder, Ian George, Clare Meernik, Kevin Oeffinger, Henry Foote, Michael J Campbell, Michelle Hildebrandt, Michael Roth, Andrew McCrary, Andrew P Landstrom
  • Physiology (medical)
  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Introduction: Anthracycline exposure can lead to cardiac dysfunction, which may possibly be worsened by secondary cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs), such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, obesity and diabetes. The prognostic impact of CVRFs in childhood cancer survivors is largely unknown. Now with advanced cardiac imaging, it is now possible to identify how CVRFs might influence subclinical cardiac function.

Hypothesis: Anthracycline-exposed childhood cancer survivors with CVRFs will demonstrate echocardiogram-based subclinical cardiac dysfunction more frequently than those without.

Methods: This is a single-center, retrospective study. Inclusion criteria are:

<
18 years old, history of anthracycline-containing chemotherapy and 2 echocardiograms performed. Exclusion criteria are: congenital cardiac disease, subsequent cancer relapse and inadequate imaging quality. Echocardiographic images were analyzed for longitudinal left ventricular strain, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and myocardial performance index (MPI). Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used to compare measures of cardiac function between patients with at least one CVRF (at time of cancer diagnosis) and patients without.

Results: There were 111 patients identified with 49.5% having dysfunction at some point in time. CVRFs were identified in 19 patients with the majority of those being obese (52.6%). At baseline, there was a statistically significant difference in mean strain between those with CVRFs vs those without (-19.4% vs -21.3%). At 1-6 months after chemotherapy completion, LVEF was significantly reduced in those with CVRFs vs those without (48.7% vs 59.7%) as well as mean strain (-15.8% vs -20.0%). At >5 years after chemotherapy, there was a decrease in strain magnitude in those with CVRFs vs those without (-17.7% vs -20.5%) along with abnormal mean MPI (0.57 vs 0.44).

Conclusions: Anthracycline-exposed pediatric cancer survivors with CVRFs demonstrate reduced cardiac function at baseline and both at near-and long-term follow-up. Further investigation is warranted to investigate the significance of these reduced echocardiographic measures and CVRFs among childhood cancer survivors to mitigate cardiac morbidity as they age into adulthood.

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