The effect of coronary artery calcifications and radiotherapy on the risk of coronary artery disease in high-risk breast cancer patients in the DBCG RT-Nation cohort.
Lasse Refsgaard, Marie Louise Holm Milo, Emma Skarsø Buhl, Jesper Møller Jensen, Else Maae, Martin Berg, Ingelise Jensen, Mette Holck Nielsen, Ebbe Laugaard Lorenzen, Lise Bech Jellesmark Thorsen, Stine Sofia Korreman, Birgitte Vrou Offersen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and purpose: Radiotherapy improves outcomes for breast cancer. However, prior studies have correlated the risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) to the mean heart dose (MHD), mean dose to the left anterior descending artery (LAD_mean) and the left ventricle V5Gy (LV5). Other studies showed an increased risk of CAD for patients with pronounced coronary artery calcification (CAC) at the time of radiotherapy.
Materials and methods: This cohort study included 3355 high-risk breast cancer patients treated in Western Denmark (2008-2016). We analysed CT scans, treatment plans, and dose distributions. CAC was measured using the Agatston score (AS). We examined the dose-response relationship between MHD, LV5 and LAD_mean and CAD, and the effect of CAC presence at radiotherapy. Secondary analysis assessed overall survival.
Results: Of 3355 patients, 45 (1.2 %) developed CAD during follow-up. AS was a strong predictor of CAD risk with a hazard ratio of 9.51(CI95:5.16-17.53) for AS ≥ 100 versus AS < 100 and a 6.7 % difference in absolute cumulative CAD risk at ten years (7.7 % vs 1 %). For AS < 100 (97 % of patients) CAD risk increased with MHD, hazard ratio 1.25 (CI95:1.01-1.56) per Gy. ForAS ≥ 100, CAD risk was driven by CAC rather than radiation dose. CAC was associated with poorer overall survival. Median MHD for the whole cohort was 1.25 Gy (IQR:1.01-1.56).
Conclusion: AS from planning CT-scans predicted CAD risk and overall survival in breast cancer patients receiving radiotherapy. The MHD remained the strongest predictor in patients with low CAC. For patients with high CAC, the high baseline risk from CAC was a stronger risk factor than the dose-related risk.
期刊介绍:
Radiotherapy and Oncology publishes papers describing original research as well as review articles. It covers areas of interest relating to radiation oncology. This includes: clinical radiotherapy, combined modality treatment, translational studies, epidemiological outcomes, imaging, dosimetry, and radiation therapy planning, experimental work in radiobiology, chemobiology, hyperthermia and tumour biology, as well as data science in radiation oncology and physics aspects relevant to oncology.Papers on more general aspects of interest to the radiation oncologist including chemotherapy, surgery and immunology are also published.