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Cardiac Outcomes in Survivors of Pediatric and Adult Cancers.

More than 80% of children and 60% of adults with cancer will become long-term survivors, emphasizing the importance of late effects of cancer therapy. Cardiotoxicity due to chemotherapy and radiation is a frequent cause of serious morbidity and premature mortality in survivors. Anthracyclines, a core component of many treatment regimens, have been implicated as a principal cause of irreversible cardiomyopathy. Approximately 60% of anthracycline-treated children will develop echocardiographic evidence of cardiac dysfunction, and 10% of those treated with high-dose anthracyclines will develop congestive heart failure within the 20 years after therapy. Adults treated with trastuzumab are at risk of a cardiomyopathy that is usually reversible. As many as 12% of adults treated with trastuzumab and 20% of those who have also received an anthracycline will develop cardiotoxicity within 5 years. Risk factors for cardiomyopathy include patient (eg, age, sex, genetic predisposition) and treatment characteristics (eg, cumulative anthracycline dose). Radiotherapy to a field involving the heart increases the risk of cardiomyopathy, coronary artery disease, valvular dysfunction, arrhythmias, and pericardial disease. Surveillance guidelines are available to guide long-term cardiac follow-up of childhood cancer survivors, but not for survivors of adult cancers; however, periodic follow-up to detect cardiac dysfunction may be reasonable. Modifiable cardiac risk factors such as hypertension, smoking, and dyslipidemia interact with cancer therapies to increase the risk of cardiac disease, emphasizing the importance of risk-factor control. Coordination of care between oncologists and cardiologists would optimize care for those individuals at high risk of cardiotoxicity who would benefit from appropriate surveillance and treatment strategies.

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