Table 2.
Risk factor | Comment | References |
---|---|---|
Cumulative anthracycline dose | Cumulative doses >300 mg/m2 are associated with significantly elevated long-term risk | 3, 12, 96–98 |
Time after therapy | The incidence of clinically important cardiotoxicity increases progressively over decades | 3, 7, 12, 97 |
Rate of anthracycline administration | Continuous infusion not cardioprotective in children | 7, 78 |
Individual anthracycline dose | Higher individual doses are associated with increased late cardiotoxicity, even when cumulative doses are limited; no dose is risk-free | 12, 61, 97 |
Type of anthracycline | Liposomal encapsulated preparations may reduce cardiotoxicity. Data on anthracycline analogues and differences in cardiotoxicity are conflicting | 85, 86, 99 |
Radiation therapy | Cumulative cardiac radiation dose >30 Gy before or concomitant with anthracycline treatment; as little as 5 Gy increases the risk | 7, 14, 98, 100 |
Concomitant therapy | Trastuzumab, cyclophosphamide, bleomycin, vincristine, amsacrine, and mitoxantrone, among others, may increase susceptibility or toxicity | 99, 100 |
Preexisting cardiac risk factors | Hypertension; ischemic, myocardial, and valvular heart disease; prior cardiotoxic treatment | 99 |
Personal health habits | Smoking; consumption of alcohol, energy drinks, stimulants, prescription and illicit drugs | 7 |
Comorbidities | Diabetes, obesity, renal dysfunction, pulmonary disease, endocrinopathies, electrolyte and metabolic abnormalities, sepsis, infection, pregnancy, viruses, elite athletic participation, low vitamin D concentrations | 7, 46, 51, 95, 99 |
Age | Both young (<1 year) and advanced age at treatment are associated with elevated risk | 3, 7, 97, 98 |
Sex | Females are at greater risk than males | 61, 97 |
Complementary therapies | More information needs to be collected to assess risk | 7 |
Additional factors | Trisomy 21; African American ancestry | 96 |
Adapted from Reference 47 with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.