Long-term cardiac effects of modern treatment for Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34689Dato
2024-04-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Bjerring, Anders W.; Smeland, Knut Bjøro; Stokke, Thomas Muri; Haugaa, Kristina Ingrid Helena Hermann; Holte, Espen; Rösner, Assami; Kiserud, Cecilie E.; Edvardsen, Thor; Sarvari, SebastianSammendrag
Methods HLS (n=246) treated between 1997 and 2007 with anthracycline-based chemotherapy in three centers in Norway were included. Of these, 132 (53%) had also received mediastinal radiotherapy. HLS were compared to controls (n=58) recruited from the general population and matched for sex, age, smoking status, and heredity for coronary artery disease. All subjects underwent echocardiography, clinical assessment, and blood sampling.
Results The HLS were 46±9 years old and had been treated 17±3 years before inclusion in the study. There was no significant difference between HLS and controls in ejection fraction (EF) (58%±5 vs. 59%±4, p=0.08) or prevalence of heart failure. HLS treated with both anthracyclines and mediastinal radiotherapy (AC+MRT) had slightly worse left ventricular global longitudinal strain than controls (-19.3±2.5% vs. -20.8±2.0%, p<0.001), but those treated with only anthracyclines did not. HLS treated with AC+MRT had a higher prevalence of valve disease than those treated only with anthracyclines (12% vs. 4%, p<0.05).
Conclusions HLS treated with anthracyclines after the late 1990s have similar cardiac function and morphology as age-matched controls, apart from higher rates of valvular disease in those who also underwent mediastinal radiotherapy.