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Cardiac effects of adjuvant therapy for early breast cancer.

Seminars in Oncology 2003 December
Adjuvant chemotherapy is an established standard of care for most patients diagnosed with early breast cancer, and its popularity is gaining worldwide. The systemic armamentarium presently includes anthracyclines and taxanes, alkylating agents, fluoropyrimidines, and antimetabolites; in the future, it may include platinum compounds and the recombinant humanized anti-HER2 monoclonal antibody, trastuzumab, as well. Anti-estrogens continue to play an important role in the adjuvant setting for hormone-sensitive primary breast cancer. Adjuvant radiotherapy is common in the setting of early-stage disease as breast conservation gains popularity, and radiation is often employed in the postmastectomy setting as well. As treatment guidelines continue to evolve with newer data, the relative benefits of treatment in many situations continues to grow. Refinement of the optimal identification of patients at risk for local and distant relapse is a continued challenge facing the treating clinician. Parallel to this effort, and of equal importance, is the ability to shield patients that will gain little, if any, benefit from treatment and to identify those who may be at greater risk to suffer from potential toxicities. Until these factors are better defined, the recognition by clinicians of long-term side effects associated with adjuvant therapy is obligatory. Acute toxicities from treatment are often reversible, but late onset adverse effects of therapy can increase morbidity and mortality in long-term survivors, and continue to be of concern. One of the most serious side effects of adjuvant therapy of early breast cancer is cardiac toxicity. This article will provide an overview of the cardiac effects of adjuvant therapy in the treatment of early breast cancer.

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