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Cardiovascular Risk After Adjuvant Trastuzumab in Early Breast Cancer: An Italian Population-Based Cohort Study

Cardiovascular Risk After Adjuvant Trastuzumab in Early Breast Cancer: An Italian Population-Based Cohort Study

Authors :
Matteo Franchi
Mirko Di Martino
Donatella Garau
Giovanni Corrao
Ilenia De Carlo
Ursula Kirchmayer
Giovanni Apolone
Marilena Romero
Pamela Minicozzi
Luigi Tarantini
Salvatore Scondotto
Annalisa Trama
Ivan Merlo
Franchi, M
Trama, A
Merlo, I
Minicozzi, P
Tarantini, L
Garau, D
Kirchmayer, U
Di Martino, M
Romero, M
De Carlo, I
Scondotto, S
Apolone, G
Corrao, G
Source :
The Oncologist
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020.

Abstract

Background Although trastuzumab (T) represents the standard of care for the adjuvant treatment of HER2‐positive early‐stage breast cancer, contrasting results are available about the cardiac toxicity associated to its use. We conducted a multiregional population‐based cohort investigation aimed to assess both the short‐ and long‐term cardiovascular (CV) outcomes in women with early breast cancer treated with T‐based or standard adjuvant chemotherapy (CT). Materials and Methods We used health care use databases of six Italian regions, overall accounting for 42% of the Italian population. The study cohort was made by all women surgically treated for breast cancer who started a first‐line adjuvant T‐based or CT treatment. Patients treated with T were 1:2 matched to those treated with CT based on date of treatment start, age, and presence of CV risk factors. Short‐ and long‐term CV outcomes (heart failure and cardiomyopathy) were measured, respectively, after 1 year and at the end of follow‐up. Results Among 28,599 women who met the inclusion criteria, 6,208 T users were matched to 12,416 CT users. After a mean follow‐up of 5.88 years, short‐ and long‐term cumulative CV risk were 0.8% and 2.6% in patients treated with T and 0.2% and 2.8% in those treated with CT, respectively. Adjusted hazard ratios were 4.6 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.6–8.0) for short‐term and 1.2 (95% CI, 0.9–1.6) for long‐term CV risk. Discussion In our large real‐world investigation, T‐associated cardiotoxicity was limited to the treatment period. The addition of T to adjuvant CT did not result in long‐term worsening of CV events. Implications for Practice Adjuvant trastuzumab‐based chemotherapy represents the backbone therapy in patients with HER2‐positive early breast cancer. Although well tolerated, cardiovascular events can manifest during or after therapy because of treatment‐related toxicities. In this wide multicenter and unselected cohort, long‐term symptomatic cardiotoxicity was low and limited to the treatment period. The findings suggest that developing tools that would be adequately able to predict cardiac toxicity at an early stage remains an important area in which additional research efforts are needed.<br />With breast cancer patients experiencing longer survival, emphasizing their overall health through management of late and long‐term treatment effects is becoming increasingly important. This article reports a multiregional real‐world population‐based cohort investigation carried out to compare short‐term and long‐term cardiovascular risk of symptomatic cardiovascular events in women with localized breast cancer treated with trastuzumab‐based or standard adjuvant therapy in clinical practice.

Details

ISSN :
1549490X and 10837159
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Oncologist
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b2c026e50cfd4f1bb1aa4d2eb27f6464
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1634/theoncologist.2020-0216