Clinical prevalence and outcome of cardiovascular events in the first 100 days postallogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant
Autor: | Jonas Mattsson, Fotios V. Michelis, Rajat Kumar, Solaf Kanfar, Armin Gerbitz, Rehab M. Alblooshi, Wilson Lam, Bridgette Lord, Jeffrey H. Lipton, Auro Viswabandya, Zeyad Al-Shaibani, Arjun Law, Eshetu G. Atenafu, Ivan Pasic, Dennis Dong Hwan Kim |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Canada medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Adolescent Anthracycline Cardiomyopathy Disease Risk Assessment Angina Young Adult Risk Factors Internal medicine Prevalence medicine Humans Transplantation Homologous cardiovascular diseases Stroke Aged Retrospective Studies business.industry Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Hematopoietic stem cell Hematology General Medicine Middle Aged medicine.disease surgical procedures operative medicine.anatomical_structure Cardiovascular Diseases Conventional PCI Female Disease Susceptibility business Follow-Up Studies Cohort study |
Zdroj: | European Journal of Haematology. 106:32-39 |
ISSN: | 1600-0609 0902-4441 |
Popis: | Recent advances in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) have allowed us to offer HSCT to older, advanced disease patients with more co-morbidities. Cardiovascular toxicity post-transplant is a major concern due to the increased risk of mortality. Few studies have examined the prevalence of CV events including CAD (MI, angina, PCI, CABG, CHF, arrhythmias), HTN, stroke/TIA, and death in the first 100 days post-transplant.We assessed the impact of pretransplant MUGA results in predicting postallogeneic HSCT CV events and overall survival in the first 100 days, and whether or not transient anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy or cumulative anthracycline dose affected overall survival. This retrospective, cohort study included 665 patients with a median age of 52 years who underwent HSCT from 2009 to 2015.The most frequent CV event in the first 100 days post-HSCT was arrhythmia seen in 2.9% of patients followed up by CHF (12.3%), MI (9%), and angina (8%). Two patients had PCI, and both survived the first 100 days. Cardiovascular risk factors predict for a poor MUGA scan but not survival. Higher dose anthracycline pretransplant predicted for a poor outcome.A history of CV disease, MI, or CAD was the most important predictive of CV events, P-value = .00002. 88.6% survived the first 100 days. Patients with an EF 50% had a significant likelihood of having a CV event compared to patients with an EF 60% (OR = 5.3, 95% CI [1.6-18.1], P = .0219). Cumulative anthracycline dose did not have a significant impact on overall survival. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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