American Society of Clinical Oncology Clinical Evidence Review on the Ongoing Care of Adult Cancer Survivors: Cardiac and Pulmonary Late Effects
Brigham and Women's Hospital · American Society of Clinical Oncology · +4 more institutions
Abstract
An American Society of Clinical Oncology Panel reviewed pertinent information from the literature through February 2006.
Few studies directly addressing the benefits of screening for long-term cardiac or pulmonary toxicity in asymptomatic cancer survivors who received chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or trastuzumab were identified. The reviewed literature included primarily retrospective and cross-sectional studies describing the incidence of cardiac and pulmonary late effects. Anatomic and/or functional abnormalities have been associated with use of all currently available anthracyclines and their derivatives. Trastuzumab-related cardiac dysfunction rarely causes death, and in most cases is reversible with improvement in cardiac function on drug discontinuation and/or treatment with cardiac medications. The estimated aggregate incidence of radiation-induced cardiac disease is 10% to 30% by 5 to 10 years post-treatment, although the incidence may be lower with modern techniques. Radiation pneumonitis is reported in 5% to 15% of lung cancer patients receiving definitive external-beam radiation therapy. A minority of patients may develop progressive pulmonary fibrosis; late complications include cor pulmonale and respiratory failure. Bleomycin-induced pneumonitis is an acute rather than late effect of treatment. Late pulmonary complications in bone marrow or stem cell transplantation patients who develop interstitial pneumonitis include idiopathic pneumonia syndrome and bronchiolitis obliterans.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 117
Authors
9- JRJoseph R. CarverCorresponding
Brigham and Women's Hospital, American Society of Clinical Oncology
- CLCharles L. Shapiro
Brigham and Women's Hospital, American Society of Clinical Oncology
- AKAndrea K. Ng
Brigham and Women's Hospital, American Society of Clinical Oncology
- LALinda A. Jacobs
Brigham and Women's Hospital, American Society of Clinical Oncology
- CLCindy L. Schwartz
Brigham and Women's Hospital, American Society of Clinical Oncology, Brown University, University Medical Center, University Hospital and Clinics, University of Pennsylvania
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Pulmonary toxicity
- Internal medicine
- Radiation therapy
- Pneumonitis
- Pulmonary fibrosis
- Asymptomatic
- Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
- Good health and well-being