Publication: Cardioprotection strategies for anthracycline cardiotoxicity.
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Springer
Abstract
Thanks to the fantastic progress in cancer therapy options, there is a growing population of cancer survivors. This success has resulted in a need to focus much effort into improving the quality of life of this population. Cancer and cardiovascular disease share many common risk factors and have an interplay between them, with one condition mechanistically affecting the other and vice versa. Furthermore, widely prescribed cancer therapies have known toxic effects in the cardiovascular system. Anthracyclines are the paradigm of efficacious cancer therapy widely prescribed with a strong cardiotoxic potential. While some cancer therapies cardiovascular toxicities are transient, others are irreversible. There is a growing need to develop cardioprotective therapies that, when used in conjunction with cancer therapies, can prevent cardiovascular toxicity and thus improve long-term quality of life in survivors. The field has three main challenges: (i) identification of the ultimate mechanisms leading to cardiotoxicity to (ii) identify specific therapeutic targets, and (iii) more sensible diagnostic tools to early identify these conditions. In this review we will focus on the cardioprotective strategies tested and under investigation. We will focus this article into anthracycline cardiotoxicity since it is still the agent most widely prescribed, the one with higher toxic effects on the heart, and the most widely studied.
Description
Borja Ibanez holds grants related to this topic: European
Research Council (ERC) under the European Union Horizon 2020
Research and Innovation Programme (ERC-Consolidator) Grant agreement No. 819775, European Commission numbers H2020-HEALTH
Grant agreement No. 945118, Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation
and Universities (MICIU) Grant agreement No. PID2022-140176OBI00, and Comunidad de Madrid Red Madrileña de Nanomedicina en
Imagen Molecular Grant No. P2022/BMD-7403 RENIM-CM. The
CNIC is supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), the
MICIU, and the Pro CNIC Foundation and is a Severo Ochoa Center of
Excellence (grant CEX2020-001041-S funded by MICIN/AEI/https://
doi.org/10.13039/501100011033).
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Basic Res Cardiol. 2024 Sep 9.





