Abstract

A steadying increase of cancer survivors has been observed as a consequence of more effective therapies. However, chemotherapy regimens are often associated with significant toxicity, and cardiac damage emerges as a prominent clinical issue. Many mechanisms sustain chemotherapy-induced cardiac toxicity: direct myocyte damage, arrhythmia induction, coronary vasospasm, and accelerated atherosclerosis. Anthracyclines are the most studied cardiotoxic drugs and represent a clinical model for cardiac damage induced by chemotherapy. In patients suffering from advanced heart failure (HF) because of chemotherapy-related cardiomyopathy, when refractory to optimal medical therapy, mechanical circulatory support or heart transplantation represents an effective treatment. Here, the main mechanisms of cardiac toxicity induced by cancer therapies are analyzed, with a focus on patients requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission during the course of the disease because of acute cardiac toxicity, takotsubo syndrome, and acute-on-chronic HF in patients suffering from chemotherapy-induced cardiomyopathy. In a subset of patients, cardiac toxicity can be acute and life-threatening, leading to overt cardiogenic shock. The management of critically ill cancer patients poses a unique challenge and requires a multidisciplinary approach. Moreover, no etiologic therapy is available, and only supportive measures can be implemented.

Highlights

  • In the last decade, we observed a continuous increase of cancer incidence, accompanied a by stable decrease of cancer-related mortality

  • Longitudinal studies of childhood cancer survivors showed that even children who received

  • In patients suffering from immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI)-related myocarditis, an increase of troponin T (TnT) ≥ 1.5 ng/ml was associated with four-fold increased risk of major adverse cardiac events (MACEs), defined as the composite of cardiovascular death, cardiogenic shock (CS), cardiac arrest, and hemodynamically significant complete heart block [76]

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Summary

Introduction

We observed a continuous increase of cancer incidence, accompanied a by stable decrease of cancer-related mortality. The patients at high risk for severe toxicity development are those with preexistent cardiovascular diseases or with multiple risk factors, associated with high dose of cardiotoxic drugs, mainly anthracyclines [2].

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