Cancer Medicine (Aug 2021)

Cardiotoxicity screening of long‐term, breast cancer survivors—The CAROLE (Cardiac‐Related Oncologic Late Effects) Study

  • Lindsay L. Puckett,
  • Shahryar G. Saba,
  • Sonia Henry,
  • Stacey Rosen,
  • Elise Rooney,
  • Samaria L. Filosa,
  • Philip Gilbo,
  • Karalyn Pappas,
  • Alison Laxer,
  • Katherine Eacobacci,
  • Amitha N. Kapyur,
  • Justin Robeny,
  • Samantha Musial,
  • Anisha Chaudhry,
  • Rahul Chaudhry,
  • Martin L. Lesser,
  • Adam Riegel,
  • Sariah Ramoutarpersaud,
  • Navid Rahmani,
  • Amar Shah,
  • Vivian Papas,
  • Toluwani Dawodu,
  • Jessica Charlton,
  • Jonathan P. S. Knisely,
  • Lucille Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.4037
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 15
pp. 5051 – 5061

Abstract

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Abstract Background Long‐term breast cancer survivors are at risk for cardiotoxicity after treatment, but there is insufficient evidence to provide long‐term (~10 years) cardiovascular disease (CVD) screening recommendations. We sought to evaluate a tri‐modality CVD screening approach. Methods This single‐arm, feasibility study enrolled 201 breast cancer patients treated ≥6 years prior without CVD at diagnosis. Patients were sub‐grouped: cardiotoxic (left‐sided) radiation (RT), cardiotoxic (anthracycline‐based) chemotherapy, both cardiotoxic chemotherapy and RT, and neither cardiotoxic treatment. Patients underwent electrocardiogram (EKG), transthoracic echocardiogram with strain (TTE with GLS), and coronary artery calcium computed tomography (CAC CT). The primary endpoint was preclinical or clinical CVD. Results Median age was 50 (29–65) at diagnosis and 63 (37–77) at imaging; median interval was 11.5 years (6.7–14.5). Among sub‐groups, 44% had no cardiotoxic treatment, 31.5% had cardiotoxic RT, 16% had cardiotoxic chemotherapy, and 8.5% had both. Overall, 77.6% showed preclinical and/or clinical CVD and 51.5% showed clinical CVD. Per modality, rates of any CVD and clinical CVD were, respectively: 27.1%/10.0% on EKG, 50.0%/25.3% on TTE with GLS, and 50.8%/45.8% on CAC CT. No statistical difference was seen among the treatment subgroups (NS, χ2 test, p = 0.58/p = 0.15). Conclusion This study identified a high incidence of CVD in heterogenous long‐term breast cancer survivors, most >10 years post‐treatment. Over half had clinical CVD findings warranting follow‐up and/or intervention. Each imaging test independently contributed to the detection rate. This provides early evidence that long‐term cardiac screening may be of value to a wider group of breast cancer survivors than previously recognized.

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