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Importance: Several studies have evaluated cardioprotective strategies to prevent myocardial dysfunction in patients who are receiving cardiotoxic therapies. However, the optimal approach still represents a controversial issue.
Objective: To determine whether pharmacological cardioprevention could reduce subclinical heart damage in patients with breast cancer who are being treated with anthracycline-based chemotherapy.
Design, Setting, And Participants: The SAFE trial was a 4-arm, randomized, phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled, national multicentric study conducted at 8 oncology departments in Italy. It was a prespecified interim analysis on the first 174 patients who had completed cardiac assessment at 12 months. The study recruitment was conducted between July 2015 and June 2020. The interim analysis was performed in 2020. Patients were eligible for trial inclusion if they had indication to receive primary or postoperative systemic therapy using an anthracycline-based regimen. Patients with a prior diagnosis of cardiovascular disease were excluded.
Interventions: Cardioprotective therapy (bisoprolol, ramipril, or both drugs compared with placebo) was administered for 1 year from the initiation of chemotherapy or until the end of trastuzumab therapy in case of ERBB2-positive patients. Doses for all groups were systematically up-titrated up to the daily target dose of bisoprolol (5 mg, once daily), ramipril (5 mg, once daily), and placebo, if tolerated.
Main Outcomes And Measures: The primary end point was defined as detection of any subclinical impairment (worsening ≥10%) in myocardial function and deformation measured with standard and 3-dimensional (3D) echocardiography, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and global longitudinal strain (GLS).
Results: The analysis was performed on 174 women (median age, 48 years; range, 24-75 years) who had completed a cardiological assessment at 12 months and reached the end of treatment. At 12 months, 3D-LVEF worsened by 4.4% in placebo arm and 3.0%, 1.9%, 1.3% in the ramipril, bisoprolol, ramipril plus bisoprolol arms, respectively (P = .01). Global longitudinal strain worsened by 6.0% in placebo arm and 1.5% and 0.6% in the ramipril and bisoprolol arms, respectively, whereas it was unchanged (0.1% improvement) in the ramipril plus bisoprolol arm (P < .001). The number of patients showing a reduction of 10% or greater in 3D-LVEF was 8 (19%) in the placebo arm, 5 (11.5%) in the ramipril arm, 5 (11.4%) in the bisoprolol, arm and 3 (6.8%) in the ramipril plus bisoprolol arm; 15 patients (35.7%) who received placebo showed a 10% or greater worsening of GLS compared with 7 (15.9; ramipril), 6 (13.6%; bisoprolol), and 6 (13.6%; ramipril plus bisoprolol) (P = .03).
Conclusions And Relevance: The interim analysis of this randomized clinical trials suggested that cardioprotective pharmacological strategies in patients who were affected by breast cancer and were receiving an anthracycline-based chemotherapy are well tolerated and seem to protect against cancer therapy-related LVEF decline and heart remodeling.
Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT2236806.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2021.3395 | DOI Listing |
ESMO Open
June 2025
Department of Experimental and Clinical Biomedical Sciences "M. Serio", University of Florence, Florence, Italy; Radiation Oncology and Breast Unit, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Careggi, Florence, Italy.
Background: Anthracycline-based chemotherapy is a cornerstone in breast cancer treatment but is associated with cardiotoxicity, including subclinical cardiac damage. This study evaluates the efficacy of ramipril and bisoprolol in preventing subclinical cardiac impairment in patients with nonmetastatic breast cancer undergoing anthracycline-based chemotherapy.
Patients And Methods: The SAFE trial is a multicenter, 2 × 2 factorial, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study involving 262 patients.
Obstet Med
June 2025
Department for Cardiology and Intensive Care, Klinik Landstraße, Vienna, Austria.
Peripartum cardiomyopathy is defined as heart failure secondary to left ventricular (LV) dysfunction with a left ventricular ejection fraction <45% occurring towards the end of pregnancy or in the months following delivery without other identifiable cause. Pathogenesis of peripartum cardiomyopathy and the role of genetic variants are unknown. We present a previously healthy 33-year-old woman in her first pregnancy with acute onset of heart failure postpartum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedicine (Baltimore)
April 2025
Department of Cardiology, Al-Ahli Hospital, Hebron, Palestine.
Rationale: Anomalous left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery (ALCAPA) syndrome, also known as Bland-White-Garland syndrome, is a rare congenital heart defect predominantly diagnosed in infants and associated with high early mortality rates without surgical intervention. While ALCAPA generally presents alone, it can sometimes occur alongside other congenital anomalies, such as a bicuspid aortic valve (BAV), a combination scarcely documented in the literature. This case report explores a rare presentation of ALCAPA syndrome in a 27-year-old adult with concurrent BAV.
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