JAMA: Survivors of Hodgkin lymphoma appear to be at higher risk for
cardiovascular diseases. Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is a curable cancer with 10-year survival rates
exceeding 80 percent. Treatment for HL has been associated with
increased risks for other cancers and cardiovascular diseases, and those
later cardiovascular complications may be the consequence of
radiotherapy and chemotherapy in HL treatment, according to the study
background.
Flora E. van Leeuwen, Ph.D., of the Netherlands Cancer Institute,
Amsterdam, and coauthors examined the risk for cardiovascular disease in
survivors up to 40 years after HL treatment and compared it with the
general population. They also studied treatment-related risk factors.
The study included 2,524 Dutch patients diagnosed with HL at younger
than 51 years (median age was 27.3 years), who were treated from 1965
through 1995 and had survived for five years after diagnosis. The
treatment for HL included mediastinal (chest area) radiotherapy and
anthracycline agents for chemotherapy.
Of the 2,524 patients in the analyses, 2,052 patients (81.3 percent)
had received mediastinal radiotherapy and 773 patients (30.6 percent)
had received chemotherapy containing an anthracycline. After follow-up
that lasted a median of 20.3 years, there were 1,713 cardiovascular
events in 797 patients and 410 of those patients (51.4 percent) had
developed two events or more.
The most frequently occurring cardiovascular disease was coronary
heart disease (CHD), with 401 patients developing it as their first
event, followed by valvular heart disease (VHD, 374 events) and heart
failure (HF, 140 events). The median times between Hodgkin lymphoma
treatment and first cardiovascular disease events were 18 years for CHD,
24 years for VHD and 19 years for HF, according to the results.
Compared with the general population, the authors observed 4-fold to
7-fold increased risks of CHD or HF 35 years or more after treatment for
Hodgkin lymphoma, which resulted in 857 more cardiovascular events per
10,000 person years, according to the results.
The cumulative risk of any type of cardiovascular disease was 50
percent at 40 years after Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis. For patients
treated for Hodgkin lymphoma before they were 25, the cumulative risk at
60 years of age or older for CHD was 20 percent, 31 percent for VHD and
11 percent for HF as first events, the result indicate.
The study also found that mediastinal radiotherapy increased the risk
of CHD, VHD and HF, while anthracycline-containing chemotherapy
increased the risks of VHD and HF as first events compared with patients
who did not receive those cancer treatments.
“Treating physicians and patients should be aware of the persistently
increased risk of cardiovascular diseases throughout life, and the
results of our study may direct guidelines for follow-up of patients
with HL [Hodgkin lymphoma],” the study concludes.
(JAMA Intern Med. Published online April 27, 2015. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.1180. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)
Editor’s Note: This
study was supported by a grant from the Dutch cancer Society. Please see
the article for additional information, including other authors, author
contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and
support, etc.
Commentary: Caring for the Adult Survivor of Hodgkin Lymphoma
In a related commentary, Emily Tonorezos, M.D., M.P.H., of the Weill
Cornell Medical College, New York, and Linda Overholser, M.D., of the
University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine, Aurora, write: “The
authors note that, in this study, individuals were not routinely
screened for cardiovascular disease. Furthermore, we do not know the
status of other important comorbidities, such as hypertension, obesity,
diabetes mellitus or dyslipidemia. Therefore, these results do not
reveal whether screening or early intervention with traditional
approaches would be effective at reducing morbidity or mortality from
cardiovascular disease.”
“In addition, the pathophysiologic mechanism of cardiovascular
disease among these cancer survivors may be different than the general
population: although traditional risk reduction strategies are
recommended, effectiveness is not fully known. Ultimately, we will need
large, long-term prospective studies and randomized clinical trials to
guide evidence-based practice in regard to defining the best approaches,
taking into account potential benefits and harms,” the commentary
continues.
“This work by van Nimwegen et al can specifically help physicians
identify their highest-risk patients: those with a history of HL who
were treated at a younger age and those who are the longest from
treatment. For most encounters, starting by asking a few key cancer
history questions will help identify these patients: (1) What kind of
cancer did you have? (2) How old were you when your lymphoma was
diagnosed? (3) Did you receive chest radiotherapy? (4) Did you receive
doxorubicin (many patients know it by the brand name Adriamycin [the red
medicine])? Our clinical experience has been that patients typically
know the answers to these basic questions, and these responses will go a
long way toward identifying at-risk patients. Nonetheless, the future
of good care for cancer survivors will require establishment of the
evidence-based best practices for this population,” the commentary
concludes.
(JAMA Intern Med. Published online April 27, 2015. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.1187. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)
Editor’s Note: This
work is supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the
American Institute for Cancer Research, the LIVESTRONG Foundation and
the American Cancer Society. Please see the article for additional
information, including other authors, author contributions and
affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.