10 research outputs found
Coronary Artery Disease
Cardiovascular complications during chemotherapy and radiotherapy are becoming an increasing problem because many patients with cancer are treated with agents that exert significant vascular toxicity. Coronary heart disease in patients with cancer presents particular challenges, which directly impact the management of both the coronary disease and malignancy.
Several chemotherapeutic agents have been shown to trigger ischemic heart disease, and as it has happened for myocardial cardiotoxicity, more attention should be dedicated to improving early recognition and prevention of cardiovascular toxicity. Cardiac imaging could facilitate early detection of vascular toxicity, but a thorough risk stratification should always be performed to identify patients at higher risk of vascular impairment
Mechanisms of Cardiovascular Damage Induced by Traditional Chemotherapy
Traditional chemotherapeutics are essential tools in the management of cancer patients. Nevertheless, these drugs are burdened by some degree of cardiovascular toxicity. Anthracycline-induced toxicity has been historically the most studied, but also the use of other drugs can be limited by a certain risk of cardiac and vascular toxicities. Here we acknowledge the main mechanistic insights, and we describe the different aspects of cardiotoxicity of these drugs, highlighting the different cellular compartments and cardiovascular components affected