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Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the characteristics of oncological patients, cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity, and guidelines-directed interventions in the Caribbean; analysis of cardio-oncology services may shed light on this and clarify links between ethnicity, cultural, and local socioecon...

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Autores principales: Piña, Pamela, Taveras, Amparo, Khan, Amir, Coyle, Justin, Bueno, Victor, Shah, Nishit, Cuello, Luis, Collado, Santiago, Mauer, Ann, Danciu, Sorin, Herrera, Cesar J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ubiquity Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9504154/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36199568
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/gh.1153
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author Piña, Pamela
Taveras, Amparo
Khan, Amir
Coyle, Justin
Bueno, Victor
Shah, Nishit
Cuello, Luis
Collado, Santiago
Mauer, Ann
Danciu, Sorin
Herrera, Cesar J.
author_facet Piña, Pamela
Taveras, Amparo
Khan, Amir
Coyle, Justin
Bueno, Victor
Shah, Nishit
Cuello, Luis
Collado, Santiago
Mauer, Ann
Danciu, Sorin
Herrera, Cesar J.
author_sort Piña, Pamela
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Little is known about the characteristics of oncological patients, cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity, and guidelines-directed interventions in the Caribbean; analysis of cardio-oncology services may shed light on this and clarify links between ethnicity, cultural, and local socioeconomic factors. OBJECTIVES: This study compared patients’ phenotypes, adherence to guidelines recommendations, and patterns of cardiotoxicity between two cardio-oncology programs: one in the Dominican Republic (DR) and the other in Chicago IL, United States (US). METHODS: Patients being considered for or treated with potentially cardiotoxic drugs were followed before, during, and after chemotherapy through both cardio-oncology clinics, where we recorded and compared clinical, demographic, and echocardiographic data. RESULTS: We studied 597 consecutive patients, 330 (55%) from the DR and 267 (45%) from the US. DR vs. US mean age 55± 13/52 ± 13 years; female 77/87% (p < 0.001); breast cancer 57/73% (p < 0.001); treated with anthracyclines + taxanes 47/40% (p = 0.151); monoclonal antibodies + taxanes or platins 37/45% (p < 0.001). Cardiotoxicity DR vs. US occurred in 15/7% (p = 0.001); multivariate logistic regression (OR 2.29; 95% CI, 1.31–3.99; p < 0.005) did not identify age >60, HTN, DM, BMI, tobacco or chemotherapy as predictors. Compliance with ASCO guidelines was similar among both cohorts. CONCLUSION: Compared to the US cohort, the Caribbean cohort of cancer patients has similar rates of CV risk factors but a higher likelihood of developing drug-induced LV dysfunction. Programs’ compliance with ASCO guidelines was equivalent. While further research is needed to ascertain regional variations of cardiotoxicity, these findings underline the relevance of cardio-oncology services in nations with limited resources and high CV risk.
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spelling pubmed-95041542022-10-04 Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs Piña, Pamela Taveras, Amparo Khan, Amir Coyle, Justin Bueno, Victor Shah, Nishit Cuello, Luis Collado, Santiago Mauer, Ann Danciu, Sorin Herrera, Cesar J. Glob Heart Original Research BACKGROUND: Little is known about the characteristics of oncological patients, cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity, and guidelines-directed interventions in the Caribbean; analysis of cardio-oncology services may shed light on this and clarify links between ethnicity, cultural, and local socioeconomic factors. OBJECTIVES: This study compared patients’ phenotypes, adherence to guidelines recommendations, and patterns of cardiotoxicity between two cardio-oncology programs: one in the Dominican Republic (DR) and the other in Chicago IL, United States (US). METHODS: Patients being considered for or treated with potentially cardiotoxic drugs were followed before, during, and after chemotherapy through both cardio-oncology clinics, where we recorded and compared clinical, demographic, and echocardiographic data. RESULTS: We studied 597 consecutive patients, 330 (55%) from the DR and 267 (45%) from the US. DR vs. US mean age 55± 13/52 ± 13 years; female 77/87% (p < 0.001); breast cancer 57/73% (p < 0.001); treated with anthracyclines + taxanes 47/40% (p = 0.151); monoclonal antibodies + taxanes or platins 37/45% (p < 0.001). Cardiotoxicity DR vs. US occurred in 15/7% (p = 0.001); multivariate logistic regression (OR 2.29; 95% CI, 1.31–3.99; p < 0.005) did not identify age >60, HTN, DM, BMI, tobacco or chemotherapy as predictors. Compliance with ASCO guidelines was similar among both cohorts. CONCLUSION: Compared to the US cohort, the Caribbean cohort of cancer patients has similar rates of CV risk factors but a higher likelihood of developing drug-induced LV dysfunction. Programs’ compliance with ASCO guidelines was equivalent. While further research is needed to ascertain regional variations of cardiotoxicity, these findings underline the relevance of cardio-oncology services in nations with limited resources and high CV risk. Ubiquity Press 2022-09-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9504154/ /pubmed/36199568 http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/gh.1153 Text en Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
Piña, Pamela
Taveras, Amparo
Khan, Amir
Coyle, Justin
Bueno, Victor
Shah, Nishit
Cuello, Luis
Collado, Santiago
Mauer, Ann
Danciu, Sorin
Herrera, Cesar J.
Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs
title Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs
title_full Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs
title_fullStr Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs
title_short Comparison of Patients’ Phenotypes, Guideline-Directed Recommendations Compliance and Rates of Cardiotoxicity between Caribbean and United States Cardio-oncology Programs
title_sort comparison of patients’ phenotypes, guideline-directed recommendations compliance and rates of cardiotoxicity between caribbean and united states cardio-oncology programs
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9504154/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36199568
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/gh.1153
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