00:00:00
I want to talk today about cardio
00:00:02
oncology drugs and side effects it's a
00:00:05
topic that I struggled myself with
00:00:08
grasping there is a myriad of new cancer
00:00:11
drugs especially the targeted therapies
00:00:13
with so many names so many targets and
00:00:16
so many toxicities that it is hard for a
00:00:19
general cardiologist to keep up with but
00:00:22
we have to keep up because even patients
00:00:25
with metastatic cancers are surviving
00:00:28
thanks to those Therapies and they are
00:00:30
presenting to us with cardiac
00:00:32
complications or a need for cardiac
00:00:35
prevention and
00:00:37
surveillance I searched and I use many
00:00:40
references for this stock these are the
00:00:44
most important references those are all
00:00:46
the references I used but these are the
00:00:48
most important ones the 2022 ESC
00:00:51
guidelines are the most important ones
00:00:53
they have very nice tables and
00:00:56
descriptions of specific
00:00:58
toxicities and you have two expert panel
00:01:01
recommendations recently published in a
00:01:03
jack cardio
00:01:06
oncology first we need to understand the
00:01:09
four types of systemic cancer therapies
00:01:12
we have the traditional chemotherapy
00:01:15
number two we have the hormonal therapy
00:01:18
that is used in breast cancer but also
00:01:20
in prostate cancer and the ones used in
00:01:22
prostate cancer are more complex and
00:01:26
they do lead to a lot of cardiovascular
00:01:29
complications
00:01:30
you have the Androgen deprivation
00:01:32
therapy such as GnRH Agonist GNR
00:01:36
antagonist and androgen receptor
00:01:38
antagonist that I will describe later
00:01:41
then you have most importantly among the
00:01:44
new therapies the targeted therapy and I
00:01:47
used to confuse this with immune therapy
00:01:50
targeted therapy is very different from
00:01:52
immune therapy this therapy consists of
00:01:56
two sorts of therapy one you have the
00:01:59
antibodies against growth factor
00:02:02
receptors on the cancer cell membrane on
00:02:05
the surface of the cancer cell those are
00:02:08
specific growth factor receptors to
00:02:11
specific cancers that promote cancer
00:02:13
cell growth and pro proliferation and
00:02:16
Metabolism so blocking those will lead
00:02:19
to cancer cell death the second type of
00:02:22
targeted therapy are not antibodies they
00:02:25
are small molecules that go inside the
00:02:28
cells not on the surface of the cell
00:02:31
inside the cells and they attack signal
00:02:34
transduction Pathways which regulate
00:02:36
cancer cell cycle and growth and
00:02:40
disrupting those signal Pathways will
00:02:43
also lead to cancer cell destruction
00:02:46
frequently those signal pathways are
00:02:48
linked to growth factor receptors unlike
00:02:52
chemotherapy this therapy tries to
00:02:54
Target abnormal receptors or Pathways
00:02:58
inside the cell
00:03:00
that are specifically expressed by
00:03:03
cancer cells or overexpressed by cancer
00:03:06
cells compared to normal
00:03:08
cells and this is an illustration of
00:03:10
that so you have growth factor receptors
00:03:14
on the surface of the cancer cells such
00:03:17
as her two which is expressed on some
00:03:20
subtypes of breast cancer cells the her
00:03:23
two positive breast cancer cells you
00:03:25
have the egfr epidermal growth factor
00:03:29
receptor the platel derived growth
00:03:31
factor receptor cd20
00:03:34
cd38 then you have growth factor
00:03:36
receptor on the surface of the vessels
00:03:39
feeding the cancer cell such as most
00:03:42
importantly the
00:03:44
vegfr vascular endot growth factor
00:03:47
receptor that's the most important
00:03:49
receptor that is targeted in many types
00:03:51
of cancers those surface receptors on
00:03:55
the cancer cell or the vessels are
00:03:57
targeted by antibod
00:04:00
then you have the intracellular
00:04:03
signaling molecules most of which are
00:04:05
kinases you see their names here they
00:04:07
end with k k for
00:04:10
kise many of which are tyrosin kise such
00:04:14
as here tyros and kyes a lot of those
00:04:18
are linked to the growth factor
00:04:20
receptors that's how the growth factor
00:04:22
receptor promote cellular growth via
00:04:25
those signaling kinases these targeted
00:04:29
kinas es like the surface receptors are
00:04:32
overexpressed in specific Cancers and
00:04:36
promote cellular growth proliferation
00:04:39
cellular metabolism they promote
00:04:42
angiogenesis especially uh the
00:04:45
transduction pathway for the
00:04:48
vegfr they also inhibit apoptosis so
00:04:51
targeting those receptors or pathway
00:04:55
kinases will lead to cancer cell
00:04:58
destruction
00:05:00
unfortunately those receptors and
00:05:03
kinases are overexpressed in cancer
00:05:05
cells but they are also expressed in
00:05:07
normal cells such as myocardial cells
00:05:10
skin cells and gastrointestinal cells
00:05:13
hence we get the side effects
00:05:15
specifically the cardiovascular side
00:05:18
effect and the vascular effect
00:05:20
particularly those that Target the
00:05:23
arterial Pathways and receptors hence
00:05:26
you can get for example arterial throm
00:05:30
including Mi you can get Venus trombi as
00:05:33
well and since those receptors and
00:05:36
pathways are present in myocardial cells
00:05:38
you can get myocardial cell dysfunction
00:05:41
dis
00:05:42
metabolism and hence you can get
00:05:45
cardiomyopathy because of those targeted
00:05:48
therapies here is a slide talking again
00:05:51
about those very important targeted
00:05:53
therapies so the first type is
00:05:54
monoclonal antibodies they target cancer
00:05:58
cell surface receptors
00:06:00
such as growth factor receptors or CD
00:06:02
receptors on immune cells in lymphoma
00:06:05
and Myoma or they can Target cancer cell
00:06:09
arteries and vessels surface endogenesis
00:06:13
regulator such as those here those
00:06:17
targeted therapies that are antibodies
00:06:19
targeting the surface their names end in
00:06:22
mb for antibodies and they are given
00:06:26
intravenously not orally and they can
00:06:29
Target the her 2 the egfr or the V egfr
00:06:34
or multiple of the CDs cd2 or cd38 this
00:06:38
is an example aab targeting cd20 on Loma
00:06:43
cells you have dumu targeting cd38 on
00:06:47
Myoma cells you have trastuzumab
00:06:50
famously in breast cancer targeting her
00:06:53
2 which is a form of
00:06:56
egfr you have BAS suab very important
00:07:00
and widely used monoclonal antibody
00:07:03
targeted therapy which binds to the egfr
00:07:06
and inhibit the growth of tumor blood
00:07:09
vessels in colon cancer and many other
00:07:11
cancers you have the panitumumab which
00:07:15
Targets egfr in colon
00:07:17
cancer now the second type of targeted
00:07:20
therapy are the small molecu drugs owing
00:07:23
to their low weight they penetrate the
00:07:25
cancer cell membrane and damage
00:07:27
intracellular signaling molecules
00:07:30
mainly those various kinases frequently
00:07:33
link to various gross Factor receptors
00:07:36
for example the tyosin kyes of v egfr
00:07:39
and
00:07:40
egfr they may Target Jack Mech and
00:07:46
K their names end in nebb or
00:07:49
occasionally Li unlike mab for
00:07:53
monoclonal antibodies you need to know
00:07:55
that because you'll hear those names
00:07:56
over and over so when you hear a can
00:07:59
drug that ends in m its monoclonal
00:08:02
antibody typically a monoclonal antibody
00:08:05
targeted therapy against the surface
00:08:08
receptor if they end in Nee or
00:08:10
occasionally Le those are small molecule
00:08:13
targeted therapy typically anti- kinases
00:08:17
frequently tyrosin kinas they may end in
00:08:20
Meb for proteosome Inhibitors use in
00:08:24
multiple Myoma and they are given orally
00:08:26
those are small molecules that are given
00:08:28
orally
00:08:29
unlike intravenously for the MB
00:08:32
monoclonal
00:08:34
antibodies and these are some examples
00:08:36
of small molecular drugs you have the
00:08:39
egfr thyrosin kyese Inhibitors such as
00:08:45
otin atin they target egfr mutation
00:08:49
positive non-s small cell lung cancer
00:08:51
you have ALK inhibitor in non small cell
00:08:54
lung cancer you have
00:08:57
vegfr thyrosin KY inhibitor I describ
00:09:00
the VFR monoclonal antibody Bas
00:09:05
cab and here you have the tyosin kyes
00:09:08
inhibitor vegfr such as
00:09:11
suntin axitinib sfin they are used to
00:09:15
treat renal coloral thyroid
00:09:17
neuroendocrine and hypocellular Cancers
00:09:20
you have imatinib the famous one that
00:09:22
targets the tyrosin kyese resulting from
00:09:26
the BCR abl Fusion Gene of the
00:09:28
Philadelphia chromos
00:09:30
in CML this one BCR a kise you have RAF
00:09:35
and Mac inhibitor kise Inhibitors in
00:09:39
metastatic Mel melanoma you have Bruton
00:09:42
tyrosin kise Inhibitors that are used in
00:09:45
CL and and some bell lymphoma you have
00:09:49
the CD kyes 46 inhibitor that are used
00:09:53
in some metastatic breast cancer that
00:09:56
are hormone positive her to negative and
00:09:59
have the proteasome Inhibitors the names
00:10:02
of which end in
00:10:03
Meb and those are used to treat multiple
00:10:07
Myoma all targeted therapies especially
00:10:11
vegf receptor antibodies and Inhibitors
00:10:14
may cause hypertension very frequently
00:10:17
because of their vascular toxicity heart
00:10:20
failure because of their myocardial cell
00:10:24
toxicity heart failure and
00:10:26
cardiomyopathy in about 1 to 10% and
00:10:28
over 10 10% with
00:10:30
VF targeted therapy and over 10% with
00:10:34
her two targeted therapy then you have
00:10:37
arterial thrombosis including m in about
00:10:40
1 to 10% that's a big proportion and you
00:10:43
have Venus thrombosis and Venus
00:10:46
thromboembolism also many of those kise
00:10:49
Inhibitors may increase a fib risk and
00:10:51
prolong QT so you have remember those
00:10:54
big five type of side effects with those
00:10:57
Target therapy hyper tension heart
00:11:00
failure arar thrombi Venus thrombi and
00:11:03
aib also you have QT prolongation you
00:11:06
get also skin problems and impaired
00:11:09
wound healing because of their effect on
00:11:12
skin cell growth now the fourth type of
00:11:15
systemic cancer therapy is immunotherapy
00:11:18
and this mainly consists of immune check
00:11:21
points inhibitor also CTI cell therapy
00:11:25
and immunomodulators use in multiple
00:11:28
Myoma
00:11:30
and I'll describe here briefly the
00:11:32
immune checkpoint Inhibitors those are
00:11:36
antibodies so their names end in mb as
00:11:39
well so those are antibodies that Target
00:11:42
physiological immune
00:11:44
breaks so those are Inhibitors of
00:11:48
Inhibitors of the immune system
00:11:50
therefore those are promoter activators
00:11:53
of the immune systems and let me show
00:11:55
you those breaks of the immune system
00:11:57
you have the pd1 protein and pdl1
00:12:00
protein expressed on cancer cells those
00:12:03
link to their receptors on the t- cells
00:12:07
and inhibit the t- cell response so
00:12:11
blocking them will activate the t- cell
00:12:13
response you have also the ctla4 on the
00:12:16
dritic cells that links to the ctla4
00:12:20
receptor on the t- cell those are the
00:12:22
three types of immune checkpoints and
00:12:26
Inhibitors will block any one of those
00:12:28
three
00:12:29
because they activate the immune system
00:12:32
they may cause autoimmune reaction
00:12:34
affecting not only the cancer cells but
00:12:37
also normal organ cells most commonly
00:12:40
and to various degree of severity the
00:12:43
following four systems the skin the
00:12:46
gastrointestinal tract the endocrine
00:12:49
system or the liver those are the four
00:12:51
most commonly involved but they are
00:12:55
frequently mildly involved when involved
00:12:57
and they are frequently well tolerated
00:12:59
and side effects are relatively mild
00:13:02
about 10 to 20% of patients treated with
00:13:05
ICI experience more severe side effects
00:13:08
in those four systems skin GI tract or
00:13:11
more rarely in severe cases they
00:13:15
experience autoimmune reaction in the
00:13:16
lung such as pneumonitis the neurologic
00:13:19
system such as gamare or aseptic menitis
00:13:23
the muscles such as myositis or
00:13:25
importantly for us the heart myocarditis
00:13:29
in 1 to 2% of patients and up to 3% in
00:13:33
those receiving a combination of
00:13:37
ICI myocarditis is unlikely to occur in
00:13:40
the absence of other more common
00:13:43
autoimmune manifestation such as
00:13:45
particularly myositis dermatitis and
00:13:49
Colitis there is some correlation
00:13:52
between Cancer response and side effects
00:13:55
meaning patients who experience severe
00:13:58
side effects with ICI generally have a
00:14:02
great cancer response because that tells
00:14:04
us that well they've had a very strong
00:14:06
activation of the immune system which
00:14:08
destroyed cancer cells and destroyed
00:14:10
some normal organ
00:14:13
cells severe side effects including
00:14:16
myocarditis warrant treatment
00:14:18
Interruption but the drug remains at its
00:14:21
Target for several months and its
00:14:23
immunologic efficacy persists even after
00:14:27
Interruption partly through immune
00:14:30
memory so even when you stop the drug
00:14:32
because of side effect you can feel some
00:14:35
comfort in knowing that the drug will
00:14:37
continue to act and will continue to
00:14:40
inhibit cancer cell and the patient may
00:14:42
still have some good response even if
00:14:45
you stopped it even corticosteroid that
00:14:48
are used to treat severe side effect may
00:14:51
not diminish the cancer
00:14:54
response being antibodies ICI names end
00:14:57
in mb and they are administered
00:14:59
intravenously these are examples of
00:15:01
immune checkpoint inhibitor a famous One
00:15:04
pmab Kuda which targets pd1 neolab which
00:15:09
targets pd1 as well you have UAB which
00:15:13
targets ctla4 and durvalumab which
00:15:15
targets
00:15:17
pdl1 they are mainly and traditionally
00:15:19
used in unresectable or metastatic nonm
00:15:23
cell lung cancer renal cell and otal
00:15:26
carcinoma head and neck cancer metast
00:15:28
itic GI malignancy such as colon
00:15:31
esophagal you have melanoma lymphoma
00:15:33
hypocellular cancer but importantly
00:15:36
recently their use has been
00:15:38
expanded to receptable tumors as adant
00:15:42
or neoadjuvant therapy such as non small
00:15:44
cell lung cancer ular carcinoma and
00:15:50
melanoma now with any of those four
00:15:53
types of systemic cancer therapy you may
00:15:56
get cancer related cardiac dysfunction
00:15:59
we call it CTR
00:16:01
CD and there are those five major
00:16:05
cardiovascular side effects one heart
00:16:08
failure cardiopathy two arterial
00:16:10
thrombosis slmi three ven thrombosis
00:16:14
four hypertension and five aib and you
00:16:16
have a six one which is QT prolongation
00:16:19
a various drug will cause some or many
00:16:23
of those in a various percent now when
00:16:26
we see a patient with a planned systemic
00:16:29
cancer therapy how do you assess his
00:16:32
risk before cancer therapy with all
00:16:35
cancer therapy particularly the ones
00:16:37
known to cause LV
00:16:39
dysfunction we have to always evaluate
00:16:42
the patient before cancer therapy and we
00:16:45
classify his risk based on the following
00:16:48
criteria cancer therapy is considered
00:16:51
high risk if at basine the the patient
00:16:54
has any of those four clinical heart
00:16:57
failure or s valvular disease stenotic
00:17:01
or regurgitant or based on EF less than
00:17:04
50% or prior major CAD history such as a
00:17:08
major type 1 mi or prior PCI or
00:17:13
cabbage cancer therapy is considered
00:17:16
moderate risk if you have borine LV
00:17:18
dysfunction with the F of 50 to
00:17:20
54% or low GLS Global longitudinal
00:17:24
strain on Echo or elevated baseline
00:17:27
troponin or NP or you have aib or a
00:17:32
history of
00:17:33
aib now with this classification it's
00:17:36
important to know that a high risk does
00:17:39
not preclude cancer therapy but it
00:17:42
warrants cardiac heart failure
00:17:44
optimization CAD risk factors and
00:17:47
symptom optimization and closer
00:17:50
surveillance during therapy and possibly
00:17:54
optimization with ACE inhibitor and beta
00:17:57
blocker therapy
00:17:59
even a Bas LF of 30 to 50% is generally
00:18:03
not prohibitive of initiating
00:18:05
cardiotoxic therapies under Clos
00:18:07
surveillance you may even initiate the
00:18:10
most toxic one which is intrac cyclin
00:18:12
under Clos surveillance and a and beta
00:18:16
blocker therapy EF less than 30% is
00:18:19
generally prohibitive of intrac cycling
00:18:22
therapy based on the ASE guidelines EF
00:18:26
less than 30% may be prohibited of her
00:18:29
two Inhibitors and other cancer targeted
00:18:33
therapy such as VF Inhibitors but not
00:18:36
always particularly if no other cancer
00:18:39
treatment is
00:18:42
possible and those are charts from the
00:18:44
ESC guidelines that provide a more
00:18:47
detailed evaluation of high risk and
00:18:51
moderate risk factors I sum them up for
00:18:54
you in those four for the highrisk and
00:18:58
three for the moderate risk but those
00:19:02
charts are more detailed for example
00:19:04
even patient with a combination of CKD
00:19:06
diabetes and smoking is a moderate risk
00:19:09
patient patient over the age of 80 is a
00:19:12
moderate to high risk patient they also
00:19:15
provide tables classifying the risk of
00:19:17
the patient depending on the therapy
00:19:18
intrac cycl versus her two therapy
00:19:21
versus vegf therapies but again it's
00:19:24
easier for me to wrap my head against
00:19:26
those summarized criteria
00:19:30
prior CAD history type 1 mi PCI or
00:19:34
cabbage or CAD symptoms are considered
00:19:37
high risk for all cancer therapy that
00:19:39
can cause car dysfunction but
00:19:41
particularly cancer therapy associated
00:19:43
with vascular toxicity such as the
00:19:45
targeted
00:19:47
therapy such as VF antibodies inhibitor
00:19:51
and other kise Inhibitors and thyren
00:19:54
kyes Inhibitors other targeted therapies
00:19:58
and also fop pyamid such as 5fu which
00:20:01
can cause coronary vasospasm and OAS
00:20:04
coronary thrombosis particularly in
00:20:06
patient with a prior CAD history and
00:20:09
this is from the ESC guidelines
00:20:12
highlighting the fact that even if you
00:20:14
have high cardiac risk that doesn't mean
00:20:17
that we should withhold cancer therapy
00:20:20
identifying prior cardiovascular disease
00:20:23
should not automatically be a reason to
00:20:24
withhold cancer therapy but considered
00:20:27
an opportunity to to optimize
00:20:29
cardiovascular risk prior to and during
00:20:31
treatment risk benefit discussions
00:20:33
should include the patients and
00:20:35
oncologists and they give a class one
00:20:37
for this now after having described how
00:20:40
to classify the patient risk before
00:20:43
therapy this is the most important slide
00:20:46
this is how we defined cardiac toxicity
00:20:50
under therapy so with all cancer
00:20:53
therapies including chemotherapy and
00:20:55
targeted therapies ESC defines
00:20:58
significant ific car toxicity as the
00:21:00
following you have severe ctrcd which is
00:21:03
again cancer therapy related car
00:21:05
dysfunction you have moderate CCD and
00:21:08
Mild C rcd you need to know that slide
00:21:11
very well any cardiologist need to know
00:21:13
that so severe CCD is clinically severe
00:21:17
heart failure meaning heart failure that
00:21:19
requires
00:21:21
hospitalization or Worse heart failure
00:21:24
with shock usually with an EF decline to
00:21:28
less than
00:21:29
40% or you may have the asymptomatic
00:21:32
severe CCD where you get an EF reduction
00:21:35
to less than
00:21:36
40% without clinically severe heart
00:21:40
failure now moderate CCD is defined as
00:21:45
clinically moderate ctrcd where you get
00:21:47
clinical heart failure that requires
00:21:50
outpatient diuretic treatment and heart
00:21:53
failure therapy but does not require
00:21:55
inpatient hospitalization unlike severe
00:21:58
symptomatic
00:22:00
ctrcd or you can have for moderate ctrcd
00:22:04
an EF decline of more than 10% to an EF
00:22:08
of 40 to 49% not below 40% or an EF
00:22:13
decline less than 10% to ANF of 40 to
00:22:16
49% along with either a new decline of
00:22:20
GLS by more than 15% or a new rise in
00:22:24
kak biomarker stron or BNP so basically
00:22:28
moderate CCD is a clinically moderate
00:22:30
heart failure exacerbation that doesn't
00:22:33
require hospitalization but requires
00:22:36
titration of therapies or an EF decline
00:22:39
to 40 to
00:22:41
49% uh especially more than 10% to a 40
00:22:45
49% or less than 10% but with some other
00:22:49
features GLS or
00:22:51
biomarkers mild C rcd is no decline in
00:22:55
EF and no worsening of clinical heart
00:22:58
faer all you have in mild city rcd is a
00:23:02
decline of global longitudinal score by
00:23:05
more than 15% or a rise in KCT
00:23:08
biomarkers BNP and troponin without a
00:23:11
drop in EF to less than 50% and without
00:23:13
a new heart
00:23:15
failure so what to do when ctrcd happens
00:23:19
so if you get severe ctrcd whether
00:23:23
clinically severe heart failure or
00:23:25
asymptomatic severe EF reduction you
00:23:27
have to interrupt the cancer drug again
00:23:29
whether it's intrac cycl or whether it
00:23:32
is targeted therapies but you may
00:23:34
reinitiate it once clinical heart
00:23:37
failure resolves and EF normalizes even
00:23:41
if EF declined to less than 40% at some
00:23:45
point and even if severe heart failure
00:23:48
occur at some point the exception is if
00:23:51
you get severe clinical ctrcd with
00:23:54
severe clinical heart failure with entra
00:23:57
cyclines in that case you do need to
00:23:59
permanently discontinue inra cycling but
00:24:02
if you get asymptomatic or mildly
00:24:05
moderately symptomatic EF decline with
00:24:07
intra cycling less than 40% with
00:24:10
moderate heart failure not heart failure
00:24:12
requiring hospitalization you may still
00:24:15
reinitiate entra cyclings after recovery
00:24:18
of heart failure and
00:24:20
EF now if you get moderate
00:24:23
ctrcd in that case you temporarily
00:24:26
interrupt the drug until heart failure
00:24:28
resolves and EF normalizes usually that
00:24:31
takes one plus month with heart failure
00:24:35
therapy diuretics ACE inhibitor beta
00:24:38
blockers aldosterone antagonist the drug
00:24:41
may even be continued without
00:24:43
interruption during moderate
00:24:45
asymptomatic ctrcd meaning an EF of 40%
00:24:49
without clinical heart failure
00:24:52
especially with troab and targeted
00:24:54
therapy not with enty with entracing you
00:24:57
do need to interrupt the drug even
00:24:59
moderate asymptomatic
00:25:01
ctrcd this is what we call permissive
00:25:03
carot toxicity meaning continuing her
00:25:05
two antagonist and targeted therapy with
00:25:08
moderate asymptomatic
00:25:11
ctrcd now with mild ctrcd meaning in
00:25:14
impairment of global longitudinal score
00:25:17
or arising troponin and
00:25:20
BNP we monitor those we take those into
00:25:23
account we worry about a decline in GLS
00:25:27
because it does predict
00:25:29
EF Decline and clinical heart failure
00:25:32
however by itself a decline in GLS or a
00:25:36
rising biomarker does not warrant
00:25:38
Interruption of the drug you continue
00:25:39
the drug if the F remains more than 50%
00:25:42
GLS per se does not prompt halting or
00:25:45
changing chemotherapy or immune therapy
00:25:49
but it predicts future heart failure and
00:25:51
warrants closer monitoring of the
00:25:53
patient of EF and starting beta blocker
00:25:56
and Ace inhibitor AR therapy this
00:25:59
applies to both enty trastuzumab and
00:26:02
targeted
00:26:04
therapies same applies to the
00:26:06
measurement of troponin and BNP before
00:26:08
and during cancer therapy it does not
00:26:10
warrant Interruption of therapy but it
00:26:13
warrants closer monitoring and therapy
00:26:16
with beta blocker and Ace
00:26:19
ARB and here is a slide about preventive
00:26:21
ACE inhibitor and beta blockade most of
00:26:24
the data address patients receiving
00:26:26
intrac Ace and carv have both shown in
00:26:30
many small randomiz st a reduction of
00:26:32
intrac cycl toxicity mainly in
00:26:34
attenuation of EF decline GLS Decline
00:26:38
and tropon Rise in patient receiving
00:26:40
high doses of an enty or those with a
00:26:43
rise in tronent after
00:26:45
chemotherapy in a large metaanalysis of
00:26:48
randomized Trials cardio protection with
00:26:51
Ace and or beta blockers was associated
00:26:53
with a lesser decline in EF but not with
00:26:57
a red reduc risk of overt heart failure
00:27:00
that said there is evidence of benefit
00:27:02
with those therapies therefore per ESC
00:27:06
full heart failure therapy is
00:27:08
recommended for patient who develop
00:27:10
moderate or severe ctrcd whether
00:27:12
symptomatic with a clinical heart
00:27:14
failure or not with an isolated decline
00:27:16
of EF outside moderate or severe ctrcd
00:27:21
preventive acrb and beta blocker should
00:27:23
be considered for one primary prevention
00:27:26
in high risk pay s that you assess
00:27:29
before therapy that I describ meaning
00:27:32
underlying clinical heart failure F less
00:27:35
than 50% CAD or low
00:27:39
GLS so in those patients receiving entra
00:27:43
cycline and or her two therapies and or
00:27:45
targeted therapies with heart failure
00:27:47
risk we should give Ace and beta blocker
00:27:51
before initiating cancer therapies the
00:27:54
second group where you use preventive
00:27:56
acrb is like a describe patients who
00:27:59
while receiving therapy develop mild c
00:28:01
rcd meaning a decline of GLS or a rising
00:28:04
troponin BNP with ef remaining over
00:28:08
50% also Statin should be considered for
00:28:12
primary prevention in adult patients
00:28:14
with cancer at at high and very high CAD
00:28:18
toxicity risk such as patients with
00:28:21
underlying CAD who are receiving
00:28:23
therapies that have a cad risk like 5fu
00:28:28
or the targeted therapy such as VF
00:28:31
targeted therapy