Heart Failure
Meta-Analysis of Association Between Mediastinal Radiotherapy and Long-Term Heart Failure

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This investigation sought to identify and quantify any increased risk of long-term heart failure (HF) after thoracic radiotherapy (RT) for cancer and identify any population covariates that corresponded with increased risk. Electronic databases were systematically searched for studies reporting relative risk, odds ratio, and hazard ratio (HR) for symptomatic HF more than 5 years after RT administration. Clinical characteristics, study design, univariable effect sizes, and associated 95% CIs were extracted. Univariable effect size was pooled and computed in a meta-analysis using random-effects model weighted by inverse variance. Six studies (45,669 patients) with weighted median follow-up duration of 13.9 years were included, each data-linkage study that reported HRs for HF. Pooled HR for long-term HF was significant (HR 1.83 [1.09 to 3.08], p = 0.022), with significant between-study heterogeneity (Q 43.38, df = 5, p <0.001, I2 88.47%). Statistical significance was lost when excluding studies of malignancies other than breast cancer or hematological malignancies and excluding studies with Newcastle-Ottawa scores <8, but the direction of effect and magnitude remained approximately the same. Subgroup and meta-regression analyses demonstrated that study differences in age at time of RT administration and duration of follow-up explained approximately 80% of observed heterogeneity. Earlier publication date was associated with increased HF risk. Other variables, including female proportion, proportion of adjuvant chemotherapy use, and sample size did not significantly impact the conclusions. In conclusion, RT approximately doubled the long-term risk of HF. This finding was associated with younger age at time of RT and longer follow-up duration, which explained approximately 80% of interstudy heterogeneity.

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Methods

We followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines5 for reporting the systematic review. The search strategy was defined prospectively and listed in the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) database (registration number CRD42015020508). Citations and details were stored in a database (EndNote X7.4; Thomson Reuters, New York, New York). A liberal search strategy was used to increase sensitivity. Two reviewers conducted a

Results

The study selection process (Figure 1) initially identified 7,329 individual studies, of which 6 satisfied our selection criteria (Table 1). All 6 were data-linkage studies, using population-level electronic databases to match very large numbers of patients with desirable baseline characteristics (in this case, treatment with thoracic RT) with hospital record diagnoses of HF. Two of the studies investigated patients with breast cancer, 2 investigated patients with Hodgkin's disease, 1

Discussion

The main findings of the present study are the following: first, that thoracic RT approximately doubles the risk of long-term HF (as defined by clinical HF) and second that covariates associated with increased HF risk included younger median age at time of RT, longer follow-up duration, and earlier publication year. The present meta-analysis is the only study that pools long-term risk of HF after RT in adult cancer survivors. Our results broadly agree with a systematic review of increased HF in

Acknowledgment

The authors wish to acknowledge the generous assistance of Ms. Libby Seymour, BA(Hons), GradDipInfM, Research Services Librarian from the University of Tasmania.

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    This study was funded in part by a Health Professional scholarship from the Heart Foundation, Hobart Australia. Dr. Negishi was supported by an award from the Select Foundation, which had no role for the preparation of this manuscript.

    See page 1690 for disclosure information.

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