New way to detect heart damage caused by chemotherapy
University of Oxford News Sep 30, 2017
Researchers at the University of Oxford have developed a new way to detect heart damage caused by chemotherapy.
The high-tech scanning techniques were enabled by funding from the British Heart Foundation (BHF), and could reveal whether chemotherapy is damaging a personÂs heart before any symptoms appear.
Currently, there is no non-invasive way of establishing whether chemotherapy is affecting a personÂs heart and symptoms, such as breathlessness, usually appear when the heart has already suffered significant damage. This means the damage is only discovered once a person is diagnosed with irreversible heart failure.
The new research found that, in rats, a type of imaging called hyperpolarised MRI can be used to see whatÂs happening deep inside the heartÂs cells.
If found to work in people, the scanning technique may make it possible for doctors to identify heart damage early and either change the person onto different chemotherapy drugs if possible or give them an extra drug that might have a protective effect. The scans would allow doctors to see how the heart muscle cells are producing energy, a process which doxorubicin is thought to affect.
Women treated with the chemotherapy drug have been found to be particularly at risk of developing life-threatening heart failure.
Dr Kerstin Timm, a Postdoctoral researcher and BHF Fellow at the University of Oxford, Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, said: ÂAround five per cent of patients treated with doxorubicin will develop heart failure. The problem is that we canÂt tell if a patientÂs heart is being damaged by their chemotherapy before itÂs too late.
ÂFirst and foremost, we need to treat the cancer as effectively as we can. But we need to give these patients a good quality of life after treatment, and that means monitoring them and taking any action before they risk developing heart failure.Â
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The high-tech scanning techniques were enabled by funding from the British Heart Foundation (BHF), and could reveal whether chemotherapy is damaging a personÂs heart before any symptoms appear.
Currently, there is no non-invasive way of establishing whether chemotherapy is affecting a personÂs heart and symptoms, such as breathlessness, usually appear when the heart has already suffered significant damage. This means the damage is only discovered once a person is diagnosed with irreversible heart failure.
The new research found that, in rats, a type of imaging called hyperpolarised MRI can be used to see whatÂs happening deep inside the heartÂs cells.
If found to work in people, the scanning technique may make it possible for doctors to identify heart damage early and either change the person onto different chemotherapy drugs if possible or give them an extra drug that might have a protective effect. The scans would allow doctors to see how the heart muscle cells are producing energy, a process which doxorubicin is thought to affect.
Women treated with the chemotherapy drug have been found to be particularly at risk of developing life-threatening heart failure.
Dr Kerstin Timm, a Postdoctoral researcher and BHF Fellow at the University of Oxford, Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, said: ÂAround five per cent of patients treated with doxorubicin will develop heart failure. The problem is that we canÂt tell if a patientÂs heart is being damaged by their chemotherapy before itÂs too late.
ÂFirst and foremost, we need to treat the cancer as effectively as we can. But we need to give these patients a good quality of life after treatment, and that means monitoring them and taking any action before they risk developing heart failure.Â
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