Home » HEALTH & FITNESS

HEALTH & FITNESS

Heart failure more likely for some breast cancer survivors

| | New York
Heart failure more likely for some breast cancer survivors
Patients who were treated for breast cancer or lymphoma are more than three times at risk of developing congestive heart failure, compared with patients who did not have cancer, finds a study.
 
Congestive heart failure is when the heart muscle does not pump blood as well as it should.
 
The researchers found that risk of increased heart failure occurred as early as one year after cancer diagnosis, but continued 20 years after patients completed cancer treatment. 
 
Overall, one in 10 cancer patients developed heart failure by 20 years after cancer diagnosis.
 
"The majority of patients do not develop heart failure, but our research helps us recognise the factors associated with it and the importance of appropriate heart care following cancer treatment," said lead author Carolyn Larsen, cardiologist at Mayo Clinic -- a US-based non-profit.
 
"Our research suggests that periodic cardiac imaging to monitor for heart damage may be needed for some cancer patients even if they have no signs of heart damage initially after chemotherapy," Larsen added. 
 
For the study, the team tracked heart failure cases in 900 breast cancer and lymphoma patients and 1,550 non-cancer patients. 
 
The results revealed that cancer patients were three times as likely to develop heart failure within five years of their diagnosis. 
 
About seven out of every 100 cancer patients developed heart failure.
 
Of those with cancer, patients who were also diabetic or received high doses of a type of chemotherapy called anthracycline had an even higher risk of heart failure.
 
"We discovered that diabetes also was a strong risk factor, but we don't know what happens in the body that makes heart failure more likely in these patients," the researchers noted, emphasising the need for further research.
 
The findings would be presented at the American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Session in Orlando.
 
 
 
 
 

TOP STORIES

Sunday Edition

View All

Journalist shot dead in high-security zone in Pak

04 Mar 2018 | PTI | Islamabad

A journalist was shot dead by unidentified assailants in a high-security zone in Pakistan's Rawalpindi, according to a media report. Anjum Muneer Raja, 40, was returning home on a motorcycle late on Thursday night when the bike-borne attackers waylaid him and opened fire, the police said...

Read More

STATE EDITIONS

View All

Devotees begin to arrive for Tuesday’s Jhanda Mela

05 Mar 2018 | PNS | Dehradun

Devotees from different States and abroad have started arriving here for the historical Jhanda Mela set to start on Tuesday. According to the organisers of the historical fair, as on Sunday evening a large number of devotees were arriving here from Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and other parts of the country...

Read More