View clinical trials related to Cardiotoxicity.
Filter by:This is a prospective observational study on a cohort of patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer M0, treated with Apalutamide, at the Oncology Unit of the "Andrea Tortora" Hospital of Pagani. Data will be collected on the patient's clinical history and the treatments carried out until the start of therapy with Apalutamide. At that time the study will be described to the patient and informed consent will be given. In case of a favorable opinion from the patient, the CRF will be filled in. Patients with CRPC M0 treated with Apalutamide, belonging to the Oncology Unit of the Pagani Hospital "Andrea Tortora" and of the other Oncology Units of the ASL of Salerno (Hospital of Vallo della Lucania) will be studied with the possibility of enrollment also from other Centers outside the Salerno ASL.
Using Multi-tracer to early diagnosis of therapy-associated cardiotoxicity using multimodality PET/MRI.
This is an observational study of the occurrence of cardiac toxicity in patients with breast cancer,lymphoma or leukemia receiving chemotherapy including an anthracycline. Patients will be identified at the oncology clinic and will be included in the study if all eligible criteria are met. The study will involve retrospective and prospective evaluations. Safety will be assessed through reporting of serious adverse events (SAEs) related to study procedures.
The investigators will identify 10 patients in the department of radiation oncology who will receive standard of-care radiation therapy, and the treating radiation oncologist anticipates a mean left ventricular dose of at least 5 Gy. Patients will be evaluated by CMRI before and within one week of the completion of RT. We will compare the pre- and post-RT CMRI scans to identify changes related to radiation exposure. Our primary endpoint will be changes in myocardial strain. Secondary endpoints will include other CMRI parameters.
Oncological diseases are the main cause of death in developed countries and also in Uruguay. Advances in therapeutics have made possible to aspire to cure and in other cases long-term remission with a significant increase in survival and the transformation of cancer into a chronic disease. Chemotherapy treatments have some side effects and cardiotoxicity is well known within them. Heart failure (HF) is a progressive pathology, with high mortality and high resource requirements of the health system with a prognosis that may be worse than some types of cancers. The treatment of established systolic dysfunction and symptomatic HF is mainly based on the indication of inhibitors of the angiotensin-converting enzyme and beta-blockers among other pharmaceutical and no pharmaceutical interventions. Aerobic physical exercise, as a therapeutic intervention, reverses the physiopathological changes that are presumed to lead to HF in sedentary people and it is known, it is feasible to execute an exercise program in cancer patients. However, effective treatments for the primary prevention of systolic dysfunction are not well known. Our hypothesis is that an aerobic physical exercise program for at least 3 months, in subjects with lymphoma and new-onset chemotherapy, is effective in preventing left ventricular systolic dysfunction, at the end of chemotherapy and at one year. For this, the investigators propose a randomized, controlled, clinical study which is blind both for the patient and the evaluating physician, comparing the difference of global longitudinal strain (an echocardiographic result of myocardial function) pre-chemotherapy minus end of chemotherapy and minus one year after, between the active group (aerobic program) and the control group (flexibility program).
This study regarding oncological patients for rehabilitation after specific cancer therapy involves three aims: (1) to evaluate the predictive value of myocardial work parameters on the improvement of exercise performance after rehabilitation, (2) to determine which echocardiographic parameters are more suitable in predicting cardiac dysfunction, and (3) to evaluate the correlation between echocardiographic parameters and fibrosis detected by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR).
using a contrast-enhanced (CE) cardiac magnetic resonance imaging(CMR) which included the measurement of T1 mapping, T2 mapping, T2* mapping and late gadolinium enhancement(LGE) sequences, as well as LVEF and extracellular volume(ECV) to evaluate the respective changes before and after anthracycline chemotherapy.
Comparing preventive effect of myocardial global longitudinal strain-based cardioprotective stragety (angiotensin receptor blocker prophylaxis) with left ventricular ejection fraction-based strategy in breast cancer patients treated with adjuvant trastuzumab.
Compelling epidemiological evidence indicates that alterations of relative telomere length (RTL) are associated with cardiac dysfunction caused by chemotherapy in children with acute leukemia (AL).The aim of this study was to explore association between RTL content in peripheral blood cells could be used as a risk predictor for severity of cardiac damage.
This is a companion study to the "Pragmatic Randomized Trial of Proton vs Photon Therapy for Patients with non-Metastatic Breast Cancer Receiving Comprehensive Nodal Radiation: A Radiotherapy Comparative Effectiveness (RadComp) Consortium Trial" (NCT02603341). The investigators will collect cardiovascular (CV) biomarkers and echocardiograms prior to, during, and for up to 1 year following radiation for a subset of patients enrolled on RadComp and to evaluate the impact of proton vs photon radiation therapy (RT) on CV function and structure.