Cardiac MRI for differentiating chemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity in sarcoma and breast cancer

Authors

  • El-Sayed Ibrahim Medical College of Wisconsin
  • Lubna Chaudhary
  • Yee-Chung Cheng
  • Antonio Sosa
  • Dayeong An
  • John Charlson

Abstract

Over the past few decades, many studies have focused on anthracyclines effect on the heart (cardiotoxicity), but only a few have focused on sarcoma. In this study, we harness the capabilities of advanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for characterizing anthracyclines-induced cardiotoxicity in sarcoma and compare the results to those from breast cancer patients. The patients receive an MRI exam at three timepoints: baseline (pre-treatment), post-treatment, and at 6-months follow-up. The results demonstrated a differential response in sarcoma, characterized by increasing left-ventricular (LV) mass and decreasing right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF). In all patients, LVEF remained > 50% at all timepoints. Myocardial strain was always lower than the normal threshold values and showed small changes between different timepoints. Myocardial T2 and extracellular volume (ECV) showed increasing and decreasing patterns, respectively, in sarcoma, which were the opposite patterns of those in breast cancer. While myocardium T1 showed increasing values in breast cancer, T1 in sarcoma increased post-treatment and then decreased at the 6-months follow-up. The results showed inverse correlation between dose and different strain components in sarcoma, which was not the case in breast cancer. Certain myocardial segments showed high correlation coefficients with dose, which may reflect their increased sensitivity to cardiotoxicity. In conclusion, cardiac MRI proved to be a valuable technique for determining anthracycline-induced changes in cardiac function and myocardial tissue composition in sarcoma and differentiating it against breast cancer. It also provides a comprehensive assessment of heart health at baseline, which is important for risk stratification.

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Published

2025-02-25

How to Cite

Ibrahim, E.-S., Chaudhary, L., Cheng, Y.-C., Sosa, A., An, D., & Charlson, J. (2025). Cardiac MRI for differentiating chemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity in sarcoma and breast cancer. Radiology and Oncology, 59(1), 79–90. Retrieved from https://radioloncol.com/index.php/ro/article/view/4471

Issue

Section

Radiology