High-risk adult cancer survivors may benefit from routine cardiac screening and surveillance during and after cancer-directed therapies to prevent cardiac dysfunction.
What are the recommended strategies for the prevention and monitoring of cardiac dysfunction in survivors of adult cancers?
Survivors of adult-onset cancers at risk for cardiac dysfunction from cancer-directed therapies
Prevention and monitoring strategies (including cardiac evaluation and routine surveillance with cardiac imaging)
Prevention and monitoring of cardiac dysfunction
This ASCO clinical practice guideline provides evidence-based recommendations for the prevention and monitoring of cardiac dysfunction in adult cancer survivors.
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Purpose Cardiac dysfunction is a serious adverse effect of certain cancer-directed therapies that can interfere with the efficacy of treatment, decrease quality of life, or impact the actual survival of the patient with cancer. The purpose of this effort was to develop recommendations for prevention and monitoring of cardiac dysfunction in survivors of adult-onset cancers. Methods Recommendations were developed by an expert panel with multidisciplinary representation using a systematic review (1996 to 2016) of meta-analyses, randomized clinical trials, observational studies, and clinical experience. Study quality was assessed using established methods, per study design. The guideline recommendations were crafted in part using the Guidelines Into Decision Support methodology. Results A total of 104 studies met eligibility criteria and compose the evidentiary basis for the recommendations. The strength of the recommendations in these guidelines is based on the quality, amount, and consistency of the evidence and the balance between benefits and harms. Recommendations It is important for health care providers to initiate the discussion regarding the potential for cardiac dysfunction in individuals in whom the risk is sufficiently high before beginning therapy. Certain higher risk populations of survivors of cancer may benefit from prevention and screening strategies implemented during cancer-directed therapies. Clinical suspicion for cardiac disease should be high and threshold for cardiac evaluation should be low in any survivor who has received potentially cardiotoxic therapy. For certain higher risk survivors of cancer, routine surveillance with cardiac imaging may be warranted after completion of cancer-directed therapy, so that appropriate interventions can be initiated to halt or even reverse the progression of cardiac dysfunction.
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Armenian et al. (Tue,) reported a other. High-risk adult cancer survivors may benefit from routine cardiac screening and surveillance during and after cancer-directed therapies to prevent cardiac dysfunction.
synapsesocial.com/papers/698cd08d2ce5fdb7c907f31e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2016.70.5400
Saro H. Armenian
Cardio-Oncology
Christina Lacchetti
American Society of Clinical Oncology
Ana Barac
Cardio-Oncology
Journal of Clinical Oncology
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