Litcius/Paper detail

Pathophysiological mechanisms of cardiotoxicity in chemotherapeutic agents

Aleksey M. Chaulin, O. E. Abashina, D. V. Duplyakov

2020Russian Open Medical Journal70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Certain success has been achieved in the treatment of cancer due to the development of various effective chemotherapeutic drugs. However, an increase in their effectiveness (aggressiveness) was associated with a growth of undesirable effects on the entire human body, in particular, on the cardiovascular system. The damage to the cardiovascular system from chemotherapy in many cases is more significant than from the underlying disease. In recent years, a new direction of medicine has been formed - cardio-oncology. The major groups of cardiotoxic chemotherapeutic agents are anthracyclines, inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor type 2 (anti-HER2), antimetabolites, microtubule inhibitors, proteasome inhibitors, platinum-based chemotherapeutic drugs, and angiogenesis inhibitors (inhibitors of vascular endothelial growth factor). This review discusses principal pathophysiological mechanisms of the cardiotoxicity of these chemotherapeutic drugs.

Topics & Concepts

CardiotoxicityMedicineChemotherapeutic drugsAngiogenesisPharmacologyVascular endothelial growth factorChemotherapyCancerPathophysiologyVEGF receptorsInternal medicineChemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity and mitigationCancer Treatment and PharmacologyAdvanced Breast Cancer Therapies