Metabolic alterations play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity, providing potential targets for early biomarker-based diagnosis and adjuvant cardioprotection.
This review highlights the role of metabolic alterations in cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity, suggesting potential metabolic biomarkers and therapeutic targets for early detection and cardioprotection.
Long-term cardiovascular complications of cancer therapy are becoming ever more prevalent due to increased numbers of cancer survivors. Cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity (CTIC) is an incompletely understood consequence of various chemotherapies, targeted anti-cancer agents and radiation therapy. It is typically detected clinically by a reduction in cardiac left ventricular ejection fraction, assessed by echocardiography. However, once cardiac functional decline is apparent, this indicates irreversible cardiac damage, highlighting a need for the development of diagnostics which can detect CTIC prior to the onset of functional decline. There is increasing evidence to suggest that pathological alterations to cardiac metabolism play a crucial role in the development of CTIC. This review discusses the metabolic alterations and mechanisms which occur in the development of CTIC, with a focus on doxorubicin, trastuzumab, imatinib, ponatinib, sunitinib and radiotherapy. Potential methods to diagnose and predict CTIC prior to functional cardiac decline in the clinic are evaluated, with a view to both biomarker and imaging-based approaches. Finally, the therapeutic potential of therapies which manipulate cardiac metabolism in the context of adjuvant cardioprotection against CTIC is examined. Together, an integrated view of the role of metabolism in pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment is presented.
Choksey et al. (Fri,) conducted a review in Cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity. Cancer therapies (doxorubicin, trastuzumab, imatinib, ponatinib, sunitinib, radiotherapy) was evaluated. Metabolic alterations play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity, providing potential targets for early biomarker-based diagnosis and adjuvant cardioprotection.