Survivors of childhood cancer may
have abnormal long-term cardiac function
Childhood cancer survival is associated with increased
risk of long-term abnormalities in cardiac function, according to a report in
the July 26 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
According to background in the article, childhood cancer survival rates have
improved from 20 percent in the 1940s to roughly 70 to 80 percent currently. The
authors also note that, "unfortunately, improved survival is accompanied
by the occurrence of late treatment effects. Cardiovascular disease and cardiac
mortality are among the most serious late effects." Additionally, the authors
acknowledge, "several population-based studies observed a six- to eight-fold
increased mortality owing to cardiovascular disease among childhood cancer survivors
compared with the general population."
Helena J. van der Pal, M.D., from the Emma Children's Hospital/Academic Medical
Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and colleagues studied 601 childhood cancer
survivors, surviving five years or more, focusing on previous diagnosis and treatment.
The study was designed to "evaluate the prevalence and determinants of left
ventricular dysfunction in a large cohort of long-term childhood cancer survivors
treated with different potentially cardiotoxic therapies."
The authors found that abnormal cardiac function was observed during long-term
follow-up (average duration of follow-up was 15.4 years) in 27 percent of childhood
cancer survivors. It was most common in patients who received combined cancer
treatments, but the authors found no evidence that sex, high-dose cyclophosphamide
or ifosfamide were risk factors for cardiac dysfunction.
‘The overall prevalence of 27 percent of childhood cancer survivors with cardiac
dysfunction is alarmingly high in the young population," the authors note.
"…These patients are expected to be at greater risk of developing clinical
heart failure in the future."
"In conclusion, more than 25 percent of young adult childhood cancer survivors
had subclinical cardiac dysfunction at their first visit to the outpatient clinic
for late effects of childhood cancer," the authors conclude. "Continued
monitoring of all childhood cancer survivors treated with potentially cardiotoxic
therapy with or without subclinical cardiac dysfunction is necessary to identify
childhood cancer survivors who could possibly benefit from early treatment, which
could avoid further deterioration of cardiac function."
This study was supported by the Foundation of Pediatric Cancer Research, Amsterdam,
the Netherlands.
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