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Heart 2001;85:430-432 doi:10.1136/heart.85.4.430
  • Cardiovascular medicine

Mitral regurgitation after anthracycline treatment for childhood malignancy

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To investigate the new onset of mitral regurgitation in patients with otherwise normal echocardiograms after anthracycline treatment and to assess its relation to other selected indicators of myocardial damage.

DESIGN Prospective echocardiographic and electrocardiographic study.

SETTING Tertiary paediatric cardiac referral centre.

PATIENTS 305 patients, aged 2–33 years (median 14 years), treated with cumulative anthracycline doses of between 150–450 mg/m2 (median 180 mg/m2) for childhood malignancy.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Colour flow Doppler detection of mitral regurgitation and its relation to changes in echocardiographic indices of left ventricular function (systolic and diastolic dimensions, fractional shortening) and to changes in the 12 lead ECG; and the prevalence of mitral regurgitation in the anthracycline treated patients in comparison with previously studied normal volunteers of similar age.

RESULTS 34 patients (11.6%) developed ultrasound detectable mitral regurgitation, which was not apparent clinically, during or after anthracycline treatment, compared with only 1.8% of a normal population of similar age (p < 0.0001). Nine of the 34 also developed non-specific T wave abnormalities. All 34 patients had normal systolic function at the time of initial detection of mitral regurgitation, but four later developed impaired left ventricular function (5, 11, 20, and 27 months after the first detection of mitral regurgitation).

CONCLUSIONS Mitral regurgitation occurs much more often in patients treated with anthracyclines than in the normal population. Echocardiographic detection of new mitral regurgitation with or without ECG abnormalities may be an early predictor of anthracycline cardiomyopathy.

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