Dobutamine stress echocardiography in the evaluation of late anthracycline cardiotoxicity in childhood cancer survivors

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Abstract

Late anthracycline cardiotoxicity has been of increasing concern to pediatric oncologists. An increasing number of patients with cardiac dysfunction has been reported without a good correlation between cardiac function or symptoms and routine echocardiographic follow-up. We studied dobutamine stress echocardiography in patients who had received moderate doses of anthracyclines years before. Twenty-three patients (14 male, 9 female; 7-25 y) who completed chemotherapy with moderate doses of anthracyclines (180-380 mg/m2) more than 2 y previously underwent dobutamine stress echocardiography and were compared with a control group of 26 healthy young people (15 male, 11 female; 6-26 y) matched for age and weight. Dobutamine was administered in three periods up to a rate of 5 μg/kg/min. Eighty-five percent of the patients showed an abnormal response to dobutamine. Both systolic and diastolic functions were affected. The systolic dysfunction was not related to diminished contractility but to an elevated systolic wall stress due to inadequate cardiac muscle thickening. The diminished wall thickening was related to the length of follow-up. Dobutamine proved to be a very sensitive method to detect clinical and subclinical cardiac dysfunction in patients post anthracycline chemotherapy and questions the concept of a safe dose.

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De Wolf, D., Suys, B., Maurus, R., Benoit, Y., Verhaaren, H., Matthijs, D., & Otten, J. (1996). Dobutamine stress echocardiography in the evaluation of late anthracycline cardiotoxicity in childhood cancer survivors. Pediatric Research, 39(3), 504–512. https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199603000-00020

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