Smoking, Diabetes Mellitus, and Previous Cardiovascular Disease as Predictors of Anticancer Treatment-Induced Cardiotoxicity in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Real-World Study

CLINICAL LUNG CANCER(2024)

引用 1|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Cardiotoxicity is an undesirable side effect of cancer drugs used in the treatment of lung cancer. The relationship between risk factors and cardiotoxicity was tested on 451 patients. Diabetes, smoking, and pre-existing cardiovascular disease may have a combined effect on increasing the risk of heart damage in lung cancer patients. Risk stratification at baseline may improve cardio-oncology care. Purpose: Cardiotoxicity is a common and under-reported side effect of tyrosine-kinase inhibitors (TKI) and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). Baseline risk factors may help in risk-stratifying patients at increased risk of cardiotoxicity. This real-world study investigated the effects of baseline risk factors in cardiotoxicity on patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with TKIs and ICIs. Methods: This is a retrospective study carried out at The Royal Marsden Hospital, UK. Newly diagnosed patients with localized or metastatic NSCLC who received anticancer therapy with TKIs and/or ICIs were eligible. Patients who received only chemotherapy were excluded. Patients were followed up from the time of diagnosis until death or discharge. The relationship between cardiotoxicity and risk factors were tested by logistic regression. Results: Of 88/451 (19.5%) patients developed cardiotoxicity. Risk factors hypothesized to have a causal relationship with anticancer treatment-induced cardiotoxicity were analyzed. Cardiotoxicity risk was increased with prior diabetes mellitus (OR = 1.93, 95% CI, 1.04-3.61, P = .038), history of smoking (OR = 1.91, 95% CI, 1.13-3.22, P = .016) and presence of baseline cardiovascular disease (OR = 2.03, 95% CI, 1.13-3.64, P = .018). The risk of developing cardiotoxicity increased in patients for smokers with diabetes mellitus (OR = 3.03, 95% CI, 1.40-6.55, P < .01) and for smokers with previous cardiovascular disease (OR = 1.99, 95% CI, 1.03-3.84, P = .041). Conclusion: Diabetes mellitus, smoking and baseline cardiovascular disease may synergistically contribute to cardiotoxicity when a patient is exposed to potentially cardiotoxic anticancer agents. Risk stratification at baseline may improve cardio-oncology care.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Cardio-oncology,Immune checkpoint inhibitor,Tyrosine-kinase inhibitor
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要