Evaluation of cardiomyopathy in acute myeloid leukemia patients treated with anthracyclines.

Journal: Journal Of Oncology Pharmacy Practice : Official Publication Of The International Society Of Oncology Pharmacy Practitioners
Treatment Used: Anthracyclines
Number of Patients: 97
Published:
MediFind Summary

Summary: This study evaluated the risk of cardiotoxicity (heart damage) in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (cancer of the blood and bone marrow) receiving anthracyclines (cancer chemotherapy medication).

Conclusion: The study found that patients with acute myeloid leukemia (cancer of the blood and bone marrow) experienced reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (percentage of blood that the heart pushes out during a contraction) more quickly and at lower doses than previously reported. Reduced left ventricular ejection fraction was at least partially reversible in most patients started on medical management.

Abstract

Background: Acute myeloid leukemia patients receive anthracycline-containing induction chemotherapy. Anthracyclines cause cardiotoxicity; however, there is a paucity of data reflecting the risk of cardiotoxicity in the acute myeloid leukemia population, and risk factors for development of reduced left ventricular ejection fraction are not well established in this population.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study of adult acute myeloid leukemia patients receiving anthracycline-containing induction chemotherapy between March 2011 and August 2017 was performed. Baseline and all additional cardiac monitoring within one year of induction were collected. Home medications and new medication initiation were determined via the electronic health record and new outpatient prescriptions.

Results: Of 97 evaluable patients, 25 (25.8%) developed reduced left ventricular ejection fraction and 18 (18.6%) experienced clinical heart failure within one year of induction. The median difference from baseline to lowest left ventricular ejection fraction was -5.0 percentage points, with a range of +10.0 to -52.5. The median time to onset of reduced left ventricular ejection fraction was 27 days, at a median cumulative anthracycline dose of 270 mg/m2. No patient-specific or medication-specific factors were significantly associated with the risk of developing reduced left ventricular ejection fraction. Of 14 patients started on medical management for reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, 10 (71%) responded to therapy.

Conclusions: In this retrospective analysis, we observed that acute myeloid leukemia patients experienced reduced left ventricular ejection fraction more quickly and at lower doses than previously reported in the solid tumor population. Reduced left ventricular ejection fraction was at least partially reversible in most patients started on medical management. Although no factors were significantly associated with decreased cardiomyopathy risk, future assessment of cardioprotective medications may be warranted.

Authors
Meredith Mort, Jeremy Sen, Amy Morris, Kathlene Degregory, Erin Mcloughlin, Joseph Mort, Steven Dunn, Mohammad Abuannadi, Michael Keng

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