Abstract
Anthracycline chemotherapeutic agents have significant cardiotoxicity. The present study emphasized the effect of anthracycline chemotherapy drugs on left ventricular (LV) myocardial stiffness in breast cancer patients by measuring the intrinsic wave velocity propagation (IVP), and evaluating the potential clinical value of IVP in detecting early LV diastolic function impairment. A total of 68 newly diagnosed breast cancer patients, who were treated with anthracycline-based chemotherapy, were analyzed. Transthoracic echocardiography was performed at baseline (T0), and after 1, 2, 3, 4 and 8 chemotherapeutic cycles (T1, T2, T3, T4 and T5, respectively). Then, the IVP, LV strain parameters [global longitudinal strain (GLS), longitudinal peak strain rate at systole (LSRs), longitudinal peak strain rate at early diastole (LSRe), longitudinal peak strain rate at late diastole (LSRa), and the E/LSRe ratio], and conventional echocardiographic parameters were obtained and further analyzed. A relative reduction of >15% in GLS was considered a marker of early LV subclinical dysfunction. Compared to the T0 stage, IVP significantly increased at the T1 stage. However, there were no significant changes in GLS, LSRs, or LSRe between the T0 and T1 stages. These parameters significantly decreased from the T2 stage. LSRa started to significantly decrease at the T5 stage, and the E/LSRe ratio started to significantly increase at the T3 stage (all P<0.05). At the T0 stage, IVP (AUC=0.752, P<0.001) had a good predictive value for LV subclinical dysfunction after chemotherapy. IVP is a potentially sensitive parameter for the early clinical assessment of anthracycline-related cardiac diastolic impairment.
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