Biomarkers for the detection of apparent and subclinical cancer therapy-related cardiotoxicity
Introduction
Cancer and heart disease are the leading causes of death in western civilization (1,2). Progress in cancer treatments over the past decades improved long-term survival of cancer patients (3). Cardiotoxic effects of traditional therapy regimes and novel treatments have contributed to an increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in cancer survivors. Cardiovascular adverse events can arise from radiotherapy, cytotoxic chemotherapy, molecularly targeted inhibitors and antibodies directed against signal transduction pathways and immune checkpoints. Cardiovascular complications may present as, e.g., heart failure, coronary artery disease (CAD) and acute coronary syndrome (ACS), myocarditis, venous thromboembolism (VTE), valvular pathologies and arrhythmias (4). The incidence and course of cancer therapy-associated cardiotoxicity is particularly undefined for novel therapies (5-8). The emerging field of cardio-oncology aims to improve risk assessment, diagnosis and treatment of cancer therapy-induced cardiovascular disease. Specific diagnostic algorithms are particularly important for risk stratification, monitoring and long-term follow-up of cancer patients (4,7,9). Biomarkers represent a mainstay for the diagnosis of acute and chronic heart disease. Their role for the timely detection and monitoring of cardiotoxicity is, however, incompletely characterized and appears more complex than in primary cardiovascular diseases (4). This review aims to summarize the current evidence, recommendations and future perspectives regarding biomarker-guided diagnosis and therapy of cancer therapy-related cardiovascular adverse events.
Biomarkers in cardiovascular medicine
Biomarkers have been established for diagnosis and treatment of many cardiovascular diseases. Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and N-terminal proBNP (NT-proBNP) are the canonical biomarkers for the detection of heart failure (10-12). BNP is synthesized and secreted by cardiomyocytes in response to transmural pressure or neurohumoral stimulation (noradrenaline, angiotensin II) (13). Following synthesis of preproBNP and removal of a 25 amino acid residue, the prohormone proBNP can be stored in intracellular vesicles. During activation, proBNP is cleaved into the active BNP and biologically inactive NT-proBNP. Both peptides are secreted in equimolar amounts with BNP half-life around 20 min and that of NT-proBNP at around 120 min resulting in a 4–6-fold higher NT-proBNP plasma concentration (13,14). BNP is biologically active (13). Elevated levels decrease cardiac preload and afterload by increasing glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and vasodilation. Furthermore, BNP inhibits unfavorable myocardial remodeling. This balances maladaptive neuro-humoral mechanisms in heart failure (13,15). BNP and NT-proBNP signal heart failure with a very high sensitivity yet low specificity (10-12). The lower diagnostic limit for BNP is 35 ng/mL and for NT-proBNP 125 ng/mL [negative predictive value for heart failure of 0.94–0.98 with a positive predictive value of 0.44–0.57, (11)]. According to European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines, BNP/NT-proBNP measurement is therefore a heart failure criterion (10-12). Also, in patients at risk of developing heart failure, BNP screening may be useful for early treatment intervention to prevent progression (10-12). Notably, the role of BNP/NT-proBNP in biomarker-guided therapy in patients with established heart failure remains controversial (16).
Many diseases and particularly renal failure contribute to an increase in natriuretic peptides. BNP and NT-proBNP are eliminated from plasma by several specific pathways (14): when BNP binds to BNP-receptors, it is cleaved by an endopeptidase or excreted from the kidney. In contrast, NT-proBNP is completely excreted by the kidney. While plasma concentrations of both peptides are increased in renal insufficiency, the NT-proBNP/BNP ratio correlates inversely with the estimated GFR. Therefore, NT-proBNP and BNP plasma levels should always be interpreted in the context of the renal function indicated by GFR (14). In addition, age, female sex, hypertension, atrial fibrillation and diabetes mellitus have been associated with elevated BNP/NT-proBNP levels. In the field of cancer and cancer therapy, anemia and fluid are particularly prone to impact natriuretic peptide levels (13,17). Interestingly, obesity shows an inverse relationship with BNP levels. Baseline BNP was nearly bisected in patients with a body mass index (BMI) of >30 kg/m2 compared to BMI <25 kg/m2 controls. This effect is possibly mediated by a higher GFR in obese patients and a reduction of circulating BNP by enhanced binding of BNP by adipocytes (18).
Cardiac troponin is the primary biomarker for diagnosis of an acute myocardial infarction given its excellent specificity and sensitivity (19,20). Troponin C, troponin I and troponin T form a complex that is bound to tropomyosin in the contractile apparatus of cardiomyocytes (21). Troponin C can bind intracellular calcium, which then causes a conformational change removing tropomyosin from the myosin binding-site. This enables myosin to bind actin for cardiomyocyte contraction (21). Damage of myocardial cells causes a rise of troponin I and T systemic blood concentrations with a peak serum concentration 12 h after myocardial injury (21,22). In patients with suspected non-ST-elevation ACS (NSTE-ACS), elevated serum high-sensitive cardiac troponin at the time of admission or at re-test above the 99th percentile of healthy individuals indicates myocardial infarction (19-21). Over the past decade, troponin detection assays have been optimized (high/ultra-sensitive troponin) (21). This has reduced the necessary time for diagnosis of an acute myocardial infarction to a maximum of 3 hours according to ESC and AHA guidelines (19-21). Several prospective studies demonstrated a negative predictive value >99% in high-sensitive troponin I measurements 1 hour after onset of symptoms (19,20,23-26). However, serum troponin can also be chronically elevated in certain cardiovascular diseases, e.g., heart failure, stable CAD and chronic kidney disease. In these cohorts, elevated troponins serve as an independent marker for mortality and should prompt further cardiovascular disease follow-up (21,27). Although troponin levels above the 99th percentile are most relevant for the detection of disease and prognosis, recent data implicate a relevance for values above the detection limit but below the 99th percentile: In patients presenting with acute chest pain any detectable serum troponin T below the 99th percentile was associated with a 2-fold increased all-cause mortality, increased cardiovascular mortality and increased non-cardiovascular mortality (28).
Taken together, biomarkers have helped to improve diagnosis and prognostic assessment in cardiovascular diseases leading to improved patient care.
Biomarkers for cardiovascular disease in cancer patients
Based on the available evidence, only a few recommendations for the use of biomarkers in clinical cardio-oncology practice are currently available (Figure 1). In the following, the current knowledge about biomarkers for cancer therapy-related cardiotoxicities will be discussed.
Heart failure
Both cancer and cancer-therapy contribute to cardiovascular disease in cancer patients (29). Comorbidities, e.g., severe infections, anemia and thrombocytopenia can furthermore negatively influence the outcome of patients. Heart failure is the most common form of cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity (30). Left ventricular (LV) dysfunction and apparent heart failure can arise from radiotherapy, cytotoxic chemotherapy, molecularly targeted inhibitors and antibodies targeting signal transduction pathways (4). Anthracyclines contribute to the majority of subclinical and clinical LV dysfunction (4). The underlying patho-mechanisms are complex (6,31).
On average, 18–48% of patients show signs of LV dysfunction following high cumulative dose anthracycline therapy (e.g., doxorubicin 700 mg/m2) (32). Combination therapy with chest/mediastinal radiation or HER-2 inhibitors (e.g., trastuzumab) as commonly used in breast and gastric cancer therapy can further multiply anthracycline-induced cardiotoxic effects (33-39). Cumulative dose, intravenous bolus administration, female sex, hypertension, diabetes mellitus and known cardiovascular disease are risk factors for the development of anthracycline cardiotoxicity (5,7,32,35,40). In a prospective study of 2,625 patients receiving anthracycline-containing chemotherapy, the median time between end of chemotherapy and cardiotoxicity development was 3.6 months with only 11% full recovery (40). A matched-control study showed echocardiographic cardiac abnormalities in 30% of long-term survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) that received anthracycline-based therapy after a median time of 13.3 years (41). Several studies have indicated a potentially prophylactic and therapeutic effect of conventional heart failure therapy (e.g., β blockers, angiotensin-receptor blockers (AT1 blocker)) in patients with anthracycline-induced heart failure. Early diagnosis is therefore essential (36,42,43).
Several other common cancer drugs have been associated with the development of heart failure, e.g., alkylating agents (cyclophosphamide and ifosfamide) (4,5). Heart failure occurs more acutely after therapy (within 3 weeks) in up to 28% of patients and can be associated with high mortality (4,5,44,45). Furthermore, molecular targeted therapeutics can exhibit relevant cardiotoxicity (46-50). The proteasome inhibitor carfilzomib is used in multiple myeloma therapy and caused LV dysfunction in 4%, hypertension in 12% and peripheral edema in up to 25% in a dose-dependent manner (51). The complete list of cancer drugs with ascribed risk of LV dysfunction is, however, beyond the scope of this review (4,49,51,52). Biomarkers emerge as essential tools for the evaluation of cancer therapy-induced heart failure. In this setting, troponin and BNP/NT-proBNP are the two most studied biomarkers in both retrospective and prospective cardiotoxicity studies.
Natriuretic peptides
Anthracyclines and many other therapies can induce chronic heart failure. Interestingly, observational and experimental studies have yielded inconsistent results regarding the association of serum BNP levels and chronic cardiotoxicity (53). A recent meta-analysis of eight independent case-control studies with 695 anthracycline-treated patients showed a small, yet statistically significant correlation between the onset of anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity and post-treatment BNP. This difference was more pronounced in Asian rather than European cohorts (53). In a prospective study in patients with primary diagnosis of cancer, NT-proBNP was a predictor of all-cause mortality (29). However, two other investigations failed to show an association between plasma NT-proBNP level and development of LV dysfunction and manifest heart failure (54,55). Children undergoing cytotoxic cancer therapy are at high risk for development of LV dysfunction (41). In a randomized controlled study, 205 children with high-risk ALL were randomized to doxorubicin treatment alone or doxorubicin with cardioprotective dexrazoxane treatment (56). Children treated with doxorubicin alone showed a higher frequency of increased NT-proBNP compared to children treated with doxorubicin and dexrazoxane. Serum troponin T was elevated in 47% of doxorubicin-only treated children compared to 13% of doxorubicin and dexrazoxane-treated children and was associated with decreased LV ejection fraction (LVEF) after 90 days (56). In children with hematologic malignancies treated with anthracyclines, the role of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-inhibitors) has been tested in a double blind, prospective trial (57). After six months, NT-proBNP in placebo-treated patients was increased from <5 ng/mL baseline value to 98.6 ng/mL. Children treated with enalapril showed a 50% lower plasma NT-proBNP of 49.6 ng/mL together with higher LVEF. These data indicate a role of BNP in monitoring cardioprotective therapy in children undergoing anthracycline-based chemotherapy. In long-term survivors of childhood cancer, two studies have been conducted investigating plasma BNP/NT-proBNP in a total of 206 patients (58,59). NT-proBNP was correlated with the cumulative anthracycline dose. Furthermore, a correlation between elevated NT-proBNP and LV dysfunction was found (58,59). Taken together, BNP/NT-proBNP was associated with cancer therapy-related chronic heart failure in adult and pediatric cancer patients (53,56).
Acute heart failure induced by cancer therapy may be an acute life-threating condition. High-dose cyclophosphamide treatment is often used in hematologic malignancies prior to bone marrow transplantation. Administration can acutely induce severe heart failure with high mortality (45). The significant proportion of comorbidities in patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy for bone marrow transplantation impedes diagnostic and therapeutic measures (44,45). Therefore, screening for cardiovascular risk factors and disease prior to therapy together with monitoring for cardiovascular adverse events is crucial (60). In a small cohort of patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation, weekly BNP measurements identified all patients with therapy-associated heart failure (20%) with a specificity of 43% (61). The authors argue that comorbidities, e.g., anemia, sepsis, fluid imbalance or renal failure could potentially downgrade the diagnostic value of BNP in this setting (61). In summary, BNP/NT-proBNP monitoring serves to identify acute cancer therapy-related heart failure (61).
Troponin
The association of elevated troponin and cancer therapy-related cardiotoxicity has previously been studied in several cohorts (62). High-sensitive troponin T in patients with primary cancer diagnosis has been shown to predict overall mortality with a cutoff value of 0.005 ng/mL (29). Elevated serum troponin T was furthermore associated with advanced tumor stage (29). Chemotherapy protocols containing alkylating agents or anthracyclines have shown plasma troponin I elevation in 12–33% in adults (43,54,62-65) and up to 47% in children (56). The cardiotoxic effect of the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 inhibitor (HER2 inhibitor) trastuzumab with or without anthracycline-based chemotherapy has been extensively studied as it affects a significant portion of breast cancer patients (37,38,66). Trastuzumab monotherapy caused elevated troponin I in 14% while in combination therapy of trastuzumab with anthracyclines, elevated troponin I was observed in 21–24% of patients (54,63,67). Notably, a comparably mild troponin I elevation below three times the upper limit was determined in these studies (43). Taken together, troponin serves to predict heart failure in patients receiving cardiotoxic cancer therapy (64).
Troponin as a marker of manifest heart failure has been investigated in different retrospective and prospective settings (55). In 204 cancer patients receiving anthracycline-based or alkylating high-dose chemotherapy, positive troponin I was associated with marked reduction of LVEF after seven months while troponin I negative patients showed only a transient (<3 months) and less marked LVEF reduction (62). In 211 high-risk breast cancer patients, an association between troponin I elevation and LVEF reduction (12% vs. 2%) could be recapitulated over a period of 12 months (65). Plasma troponin I at the completion of anthracycline administration (maximum troponin I) and troponin I measured 3 months after therapy were predictors of cardiotoxicity (54,55). Trastuzumab-induced heart failure determined by reduced LVEF was more frequent in patients with elevated troponin I (67). Only limited data is available for repetitive troponin tests in the course of cancer therapy. A prospective study in 703 cancer patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy demonstrated that prolonged troponin I elevation one month after therapy was associated with a higher decrease in LVEF and associated with higher rates of a combined adverse endpoint (cardiac death, pulmonary edema, overt heart failure, LVEF-reduction >25%, life-threatening arrhythmias) than isolated troponin I elevation immediately after therapy (64). In a small prospective study, serial troponin I measurements in breast cancer patients identified that the velocity of troponin I increase during chemotherapy was higher in patients who develop clinically apparent heart failure or a decline of LVEF <50% during a three-years follow-up (68). Recent studies suggested that combined echocardiographic characterization and troponin measurement could be beneficial for prediction of cardiotoxicity. Global longitudinal strain (GLS) is increasingly used as a parameter for myocardial function (55). Combination of troponin T and myocardial GLS measurement increased sensitivity from 86% to 93% in a small group of patients treated with the anthracycline epirubicin. Either impaired GLS or elevated troponin T were associated with a 15-fold risk for LV dysfunction (54,69,70).
A role of serum troponin level in predicting response to heart failure therapy in manifest cardiotoxicity and a benefit of serum troponin in biomarker-guided therapy have been shown in prospective studies (63,67,71). The association of troponin and LVEF recovery was tested in 251 patients receiving trastuzumab. LVEF recovery was less frequent in patients with elevated troponin I than in troponin-negative patients in patients (35% vs. 100%) (67). Troponin I as a biomarker-guided preventive therapy of cardiotoxicity has been evaluated in a cohort of 473 cancer patients receiving different regimes of high dose chemotherapy (63). One hundred and fourteen (26%) patients with elevated peak troponin I >0.07 ng/mL were characterized “at risk” for cardiotoxicity. The identified patients were randomized to receive to ACE inhibitor enalapril or no medication for one year. Control subjects showed a significant and sustained reduction in LVEF while LVEF in enalapril-treated patients remained constant (63). However, a recent prospective trial could not show a benefit of a troponin-guided strategy compared to troponin-independent preventive administration of enalapril (71).
Several prospective randomized studies have recently presented preventive and therapeutic approaches in cancer therapy-related LV-dysfunction. The OVERCOME trial (preventiOn of left Ventricular dysfunction with Enalapril and caRvedilol in patients submitted to intensive ChemOtherapy for the treatment of Malignant hEmopathies) in patients undergoing chemotherapy or autologous stem cell transplantation tested the effect of enalapril and carvedilol starting before chemotherapy for a period of six months (43). After 6 months, patients treated with enalapril and carvedilol had stable LVEF while LVEF decreased in the control group. Also, control patients had higher rates of combined death or heart failure. High-sensitive troponin I and BNP were obtained before and after chemotherapy cycles. Interestingly, both biomarkers were comparable between intervention and control group. In addition, no association was found between LVEF and troponin I or BNP level (43). The PRADA trial (PRevention of cArdiac Dysfunction during Adjuvant breast cancer therapy) aimed to investigate preventive treatment for cardiotoxicity in 130 breast cancer patients receiving anthracycline-based chemotherapy, trastuzumab (22%) and radiotherapy (70%). Patients were randomized to receive candesartan, metoprolol or placebo controls. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) guided LVEF assessment revealed a small significant higher LVEF in candesartan treated patients (1.8% LVEF difference) while no effect using metoprolol could be seen. However, the increase of troponin in control patients was attenuated using metoprolol but not in candesartan-treated patients (36,72). In a recent trial investigating “Carvedilol for Prevention of Chemotherapy-Related CardiotoxicitY” (CECCY trial), decreased serum troponin I was found at nine and 12 months in breast cancer patients undergoing anthracycline and cyclophosphamide therapy treated with carvedilol compared to placebo (73). However, the authors did not report on an association between elevated troponin I and LVEF or heart failure symptoms (73).
Use of biomarkers for detection and prevention of therapy-related heart failure
In patients with planned cardiotoxic cancer therapy, clinical examination, ECG, echocardiography with strain analysis and assessment of troponin I/T and NT-proBNP for the evaluation of baseline risk can be recommended. If baseline characterization reveals pathologic findings (ejection fraction <50%, abnormal GLS, abnormal troponin or NT-proBNP), it can be recommended to start ACE inhibitor/AT1 blocker or β blocker therapy (5,63,71). Cardiovascular risk factors and disease should be monitored and optimized (5). Management of dyslipidemia is of particular importance (74). A tendency towards an increased frequency of heart failure in breast cancer patients undergoing anthracycline treatment was observed when low-density lipoprotein (LDL) was elevated (LDL >100 m/dL) (75) and patients showed lower rates of new-onset heart failure when treated with statins (75,76). Therefore, early statin therapy that lowers LDL and exhibits beneficial anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative effects can counteract the development of cardiotoxicity (74).
During therapy, echocardiography and assessment of troponin and NT-proBNP every three months can be recommended (5). When elevated troponin is found together with troponin dynamics, chest pain or ECG abnormalities, patients should be treated for suspected ACS according to ESC/AHA guidelines and coronary angiography should be initiated (19,20,77).
CAD and ACS
Many cancer therapies can induce or aggravate acute and chronic injury to coronary arteries (4). Cancer itself, cancer therapy and common cardiovascular risk factors synergistically account for ACS risk (78). Malignant tumors induce a chronic inflammatory state (79). In preclinical models, cancer cells secrete inflammatory cytokines, which promote endothelial damage and accelerate atherosclerosis (79). Furthermore, malignant diseases often promote a prothrombotic milieu in the vasculature (78,79). Common cardiovascular risk factors including arterial hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, smoking and history of CAD causes a further increase in ACS risk (8,80). In addition, prolonged life expectancy of cancer patients raises their baseline CAD risk. Monitoring of blood pressure and serum LDL are recommended regularly in cancer patients (78).
Radiotherapy affects coronary arteries, valves, pericardium and myocardium (81). Patients receiving radiotherapy are at a particular risk for CAD and ACS. Enhanced expression of inflammatory cytokines following radiation has been related to the formation of a fibrotic and sclerotic remodeling of coronary arteries rather than canonical arteriosclerosis (82). Radiation exposure also damages endothelial cells causing them to switch to a senescent state with increased production of reactive oxygen species and adhesion molecules while nitric oxide production is severely decreased (83). These patho-mechanisms induce and accelerate development of atherosclerosis. Simultaneously, the inflammatory stimulus triggers myocardial fibrosis that can cause diastolic dysfunction eventually leading to heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (81,84). Therefore, both CAD and heart failure can simultaneously develop after exposure to radiation (8,81,84).
Several studies examined the role of early use of cardiac injury biomarkers in radiotherapy. Although there is evidence that left chest radiotherapy can induce increased high-sensitive troponin and creatine kinase MB (CK-MB), a convincing association between radiation-induced troponin activation and LV systolic or diastolic dysfunction has not been forwarded so far (85-87). Only limited data is available on the role of BNP in radiation-associated cardiotoxicity. Two prospective studies in breast cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy showed a significant increase in BNP plasma level at one month, six months and one year following radiation. Increased BNP levels were not associated with manifest or subclinical signs for LV dysfunction or onset of CAD. BNP levels were, however, related to the radiation doses (88,89).
Myocardial ischemia caused by acute endothelial dysfunction and vasospasm or arterial thrombosis is a common adverse event in treatment with the fluoropyrimidine 5-fluoruracil (5-FU). 5-FU induces endothelial injury and vasospasms due to abnormal vaso-reactivity leading to manifest myocardial ischemia in up to 18% of patients typically within the early treatment phase (4). Calcium-antagonists and nitrate-derivates can be beneficial in 5-FU-associated vasospasm (4,5,78). With a lower frequency, taxanes (paclitaxel, docetaxel) can induce troponin-positive vasospastic ACS (78). Cisplatin may cause arterial thrombosis in cerebral and coronary vessels. As a patho-mechanism, both induction of a procoagulant status and endothelial injury have been identified (4,90). This may become clinically evident as ACS during treatment or result in accelerated development of CAD. A recent meta-analysis has shown that high dose anti-VEGF treatment with bevacizumab accounts for cardiac and cerebral ischemic events with a 4.4-fold relative risk (91). Also, tyrosine kinase inhibitors with anti-VEGF activity, especially regorafenib, also increase the risk for myocardial ischemia (52). Besides this finding, VEGF-targeting drugs have been shown to induce arterial hypertension that could contribute to long-term CAD development (4-6,8,79). This demonstrates that various drugs can contribute to ACS development. The exact risks have not been completely studied.
Diagnosis of ACS in cancer patients is challenging and often associated with an atypical clinical presentation compared to patients without underling malignant disease (92). Particularly, only 30.3% present with chest pain and only 44% show dyspnea when presenting with ACS (92). Frequency of these symptoms is lower in NSTE-ACS compared to ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) (92). The low occurrence of angina pectoris can be attributed to pain medication or neuropathy (78,92). Therefore, it is recommended to assess cardiac biomarkers together with ECG and history of symptoms, risk factors, underlying cancer/cancer therapy according to ESC and AHA guidelines for NSTE-ACS (19,20). No evidence for a 1-hour troponin approach in suspected ACS in cancer patients is available (19,20,23,24,27). In cancer patients, timely assessment of hemoglobin, platelet count and coagulation tests are particularly necessary for a risk-stratification when percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is planned (4,8,78,93). Acute myocardial infarction requires PCI according to existing guidelines (19,20,77). With regard to outcome, PCI in cancer patients has shown similar reperfusion rates compared to patients without cancer in the setting of acute STEMI (93). Anemia (hemoglobin <12 g/dL for women and <13 g/dL for men) served as an independent risk for all-cause mortality (93). It is recommended to determine the best possible individual interventional strategy in close interaction with the treating oncologist.
Myocarditis
Over the last three years, immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) have been widely implemented in treatment of advanced tumors (94,95). Immune checkpoints such as cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated Protein 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed death 1 (PD-1) prevent an exaggerated (auto-)immune response against healthy cells but are exploited by tumor cells to prevent an anti-tumor immune response (96). ICI therapy induces a T-cell mediated immune reaction against tumor cells by blocking this anti-inflammatory mechanism. Since 2016, ICIs have been approved for bladder cancer, renal cell cancer, head and neck cancer, Hodgkin’s lymphoma and Merkel cell carcinoma (96).
The first evidence of potential involvement of immune checkpoints in maintaining cardiac integrity was found in immune checkpoint deficient mouse models (97). Fulminant heart failure has been observed in both CTLA-4 and PD-1 deficient mice (97,98). In the latter, formation of anti-troponin I antibodies was identified as the most likely underlying mechanism (97-99). Multiple clinical case reports of fulminant autoimmune myocarditis under ICI therapy have been published since 2016 (100,101). Recent data show a comparably high prevalence of up to 1.14%, a mortality of 36% (monotherapy) to 67% (combinational therapy) and a median onset of 17–34 days after the beginning of ICI therapy (102,103). Most patients present with severe heart failure (102). Severe arrhythmias and cardiogenic shock with the need for intensive care unit treatment, inotropic medication and extracorporeal life support are common within this group of patients (101-104).
Given the fulminant nature of ICI-related myocarditis, early detection is essential for the best possible treatment. The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) has proposed a diagnostic workup (102). At baseline, ECG and troponin measurement should be conducted. Regarding the usual onset of ICI-related myocarditis within the first 6 weeks of therapy, it seems reasonable to execute weekly electrocardiogram (ECG) and troponin measurements within the first 4 weeks of treatment. Upon the onset of symptoms, it is recommended to obtain ECG, echocardiography, chest X-ray and assessment of troponin and NT-proBNP (105). Elevated troponin was found in 94% of all cases of ICI-related myocarditis while 100% of the patients showing major adverse cardiac events (MACE) had elevated troponin (102). The diagnostic value of NT-proBNP was lower with only 66% sensitivity and no changes in patients presenting with MACE (102). Measurement of total CK and CK-MB as well as myoglobin and lactate dehydrogenase are recommended since many patients will develop concurrent peripheral myositis (103).
Corticosteroid-based immunosuppressive therapy, optimum heart failure medication and permanent discontinuation of ICI-therapy has shown promising results in retrospective analyses and case reports. According to the ASCO-recommendations, high-dose steroid therapy (e.g., 1–2 mg/kg prednisone) should be administered initially. Higher initial steroid doses seem to be associated with lower discharge serum troponin. The beneficial use of mycophenolate, infliximab, intravenous immunoglobulins or antithymocyte globulin has been shown in individual cases (100-102,105).
VTE
Patients with cancer and cancer therapy are at risk for deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) (106,107). D-dimers are small fibrin fragments present in the circulation. D-dimer level generally serves as a marker for thrombosis (108) but may be increased following a variety of conditions e.g. trauma, inflammation and cancer (106,109). Therefore, increased D-dimer levels cannot confirm suspected VTE (106,110).
Cancer is associated with hypercoagulable condition caused by the release of procoagulant factors and an inflammatory response (111). The incidence of VTE events is therefore significantly higher in cancer patients compared to the general population (112). The frequency of VTE varies with disease stage and the type of cancer (107,113). Several cancer therapies can multiply this risk.
D-dimers interpretation is difficult in cancer patients. However, D-dimers levels were associated with poor prognosis in various malignancies independent from occurrence of VTE (109). Several studies have addressed the question whether a higher D-dimer cutoff point would increase diagnostic performance in suspected VTE (114,115). Retrospective and prospective analyses have shown best diagnostic performance for 981–1,500 ng/mL D-dimer cutoff value (114,115). However, a difference in survival has not been shown and the findings have not yet been externally validated (114,115).
To summarize, it is recommended to utilize D-dimer level to rule out suspected VTE. Due to a low specificity, D-dimer level is not suitable to confirm diagnosis but can be used to support diagnosis of suspected VTE when additional diagnostic measures (compression venous ultrasonography) were conducted. D-dimer level can be used to predict VTE risk and show an association with location of the clot in manifest PE.
Future perspective and conclusion
Lately, several novel potential biomarkers, e.g., nitric oxide (NO) metabolites, have been studied (116). Increased oxidative stress promotes cardiotoxicity in cancer patients treated with anthracyclines. When conversion of arginine to NO is impaired, alternative metabolites such as N-monomethyl arginine (MMA) and dimethylarginine (ADMA) are synthesized causing a further inhibition of NO-synthase (116). In a prospective study in 170 breast cancer patients receiving doxorubicin ± trastuzumab, the association between cardiotoxicity and plasma NO metabolites was examined. At two months, ADMA and MMA were associated with anthracycline-mediated cardiotoxicity with a hazard ratio of 2.70–3.33 for each 1.5-fold increase (116). These findings highlight a potential mechanistic, diagnostic and therapeutic value of NO-metabolites in cancer therapy-related cardiotoxicity.
Within the growing field of cardio-oncology, biomarkers represent a pivotal instrument for risk assessment, diagnosis and treatment monitoring of cancer-related and cancer therapy-related cardiotoxicity (43,63,67,86,117). Complex interaction between cancer, cancer-therapy and cardiovascular conditions indicates the need for a multidisciplinary cardio-oncologic approach to ensure optimum treatment quality (4). While chemotherapy- and radiotherapy-associated cardiotoxicity has been extensively studied, knowledge about cardiotoxic effects of modern molecularly targeted therapies remains sparse and studies characterizing these side effects are needed (49). To implement biomarkers in a standardized fashion, the establishment of guidelines and recommendations is crucial and will help to improve treatment of cardio-oncology patients.
Acknowledgements
Dr. L Michel acknowledges the following funding source: IFORES research grant from the Medical Faculty, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany.
Footnote
Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
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