Abstract
651 Background: With recent improvements in survival of cancer patients and emphasis on high-value care at end-of-life, the management of cardiovascular disease in patients with cancer is increasingly important. To our knowledge, there is no current US data examining how the presence and extent of cancer influence cardiologists’ decision-making for common cardiovascular conditions. Methods: An anonymous online vignette-based survey of cardiologists was conducted at five US institutions investigating how the extent of gastrointestinal and thoracic malignancies (prior/localized, metastatic) would influence treatment recommendation for atrial fibrillation (AF), aortic stenosis (AS), unstable angina (UA) and obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). Results: Thirty-three percent (86/259) of cardiologists completed the survey between September and November 2019. Participants were 67% male, 51% below age 40, and 58% had five or more years of clinical experience. Majority of cardiologists practiced at teaching hospitals (72%) and were non-interventional (63%). Cardiologists were more likely to recommend procedural interventions in patients with localized cancer than with metastatic disease: AF (LAAO: 20% vs 8%), AS (AVR: 83% vs 11%), UA (LHC: 70% vs 27%) and obstructive CAD (PCI: 81% vs 38%) (Table). In patients with metastatic cancer, most cardiologists sought an oncology (82%) or a palliative care (69%) consult. Conclusions: Cardiologists were less likely to recommend invasive cardiovascular therapies to patients with metastatic cancer. This preference pattern likely reflects the influence of comorbidities and quality of life expectation on cardiologists’ treatment recommendations but may also be related to the stigma of advanced cancer. Better communication between cardiologists and oncologists is necessary to a personalized care of patients with cancer and cardiovascular disease that would maximize treatment benefit with least morbidity.[Table: see text]
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