Abstract

Anthracyclines are known to be associated with chemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity. Limited data focus on dynamic myocardial injury during the course of chemotherapy in patients with breast cancer. To investigate the variation of tissue characterization and myocardial deformation derived by cardiac MRI during anthracycline chemotherapy. Prospective. Fifty-eight female breast cancer patients (mean age: 52.82 ± 2.61 years) were enrolled. A 3.0-T, cardiac MRI including cine balanced steady-state free precession, a modified Looker-Locker inversion recovery (MOLLI), and a fast spin echo (FSE) T2-weighted sequences were performed. Cardiac MRI was performed baseline and after two, four, and six cycles of chemotherapy. Assessment of global longitudinal strain (GLS), global circumstance strain (GCS), global radial strain (GRS), and strain rate (GLS-s, GCS-s, GRS-s) and T1, T2 and T2* were accomplished by CVI42. The anthracycline dose and risk factors were also collected before each cardiac MRI. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) for repeated measures was used to compare the changes in LVEF cardiac function, strain and T1/T2/T2* parameters over time. Pearson correlation analyses were performed to estimate the potential associations between differences in myocardial characteristics (∆) and the chemotherapy cycle. A P value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. LVEF was not significantly different from pretreatment MRI regarding each cycle of chemotherapy (P=0.54). Compared with baseline, patients had significantly lower GLS (-15.85% ± 0.83%, -14.50% ± 0.88%, -12.34% ± 1.01% vs. -18.82% ± 0.92%) and GLS-s (-0.71% ± 0.07%, -0.65% ± 0.05%, -0.64% ± 0.04% vs. -0.95 ± 0.06%) and increased T2 values (57.21 ± 4.27 msec, 58.60 ± 3.93 msec, 58.10 ± 3.17 msec vs. 43.88 ± 3.28 msec) at two, four and six cycles of chemotherapy treatment. ∆GLS and ∆GLS-s were significantly associated with the chemotherapy cycle (correlation coefficients for GLS=0.75, GLS-s=0.75). Cardiac MRI can precisely detect the dynamic changes of anthracycline-induced subclinical myocardial injury that is represented as a gradually decrease in GLS and GLS-s. These parameters may provide new insight for monitoring risk and therapy in patients with breast cancer. 2. Stage 1.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call