DNA Damage Laboratory, Physics Department, School of Applied Mathematical and Physical Sciences, National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), Zografou, 15780, Athens, Greece; Biomedical Physics in Radiation Oncology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany.
Izmir Biomedicine and Genome Center, Izmir, Turkey; Izmir International Biomedicine and Genome Institute, Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir, Turkey.
Pharmacol Ther. 2024 Aug;260:108670. doi: 10.1016/j.pharmthera.2024.108670. Epub 2024 May 31.
Advances in cancer therapeutics have improved patient survival rates. However, cancer survivors may suffer from adverse events either at the time of therapy or later in life. Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) represent a clinically important, but mechanistically understudied complication, which interfere with the continuation of best-possible care, induce life-threatening risks, and/or lead to long-term morbidity. These concerns are exacerbated by the fact that targeted therapies and immunotherapies are frequently combined with radiotherapy, which induces durable inflammatory and immunogenic responses, thereby providing a fertile ground for the development of CVDs. Stressed and dying irradiated cells produce 'danger' signals including, but not limited to, major histocompatibility complexes, cell-adhesion molecules, proinflammatory cytokines, and damage-associated molecular patterns. These factors activate intercellular signaling pathways which have potentially detrimental effects on the heart tissue homeostasis. Herein, we present the clinical crosstalk between cancer and heart diseases, describe how it is potentiated by cancer therapies, and highlight the multifactorial nature of the underlying mechanisms. We particularly focus on radiotherapy, as a case known to often induce cardiovascular complications even decades after treatment. We provide evidence that the secretome of irradiated tumors entails factors that exert systemic, remote effects on the cardiac tissue, potentially predisposing it to CVDs. We suggest how diverse disciplines can utilize pertinent state-of-the-art methods in feasible experimental workflows, to shed light on the molecular mechanisms of radiotherapy-related cardiotoxicity at the organismal level and untangle the desirable immunogenic properties of cancer therapies from their detrimental effects on heart tissue. Results of such highly collaborative efforts hold promise to be translated to next-generation regimens that maximize tumor control, minimize cardiovascular complications, and support quality of life in cancer survivors.
癌症治疗的进展提高了患者的生存率。然而,癌症幸存者在治疗时或以后的生活中可能会遭受不良反应。心血管疾病 (CVD) 是一种重要的临床并发症,但在机制上研究不足,它会干扰最佳护理的延续,引发危及生命的风险,和/或导致长期发病。靶向治疗和免疫疗法经常与放射治疗结合使用,这会引起持久的炎症和免疫原性反应,从而为 CVD 的发展提供了有利条件,这一事实加剧了这些担忧。受辐射的应激和死亡细胞会产生“危险”信号,包括但不限于主要组织相容性复合物、细胞黏附分子、促炎细胞因子和损伤相关分子模式。这些因素激活细胞间信号通路,对心脏组织稳态有潜在的有害影响。在此,我们介绍了癌症和心脏病之间的临床相互作用,描述了癌症治疗如何增强这种相互作用,并强调了潜在机制的多因素性质。我们特别关注放射治疗,因为它是一种已知的经常在治疗后几十年引发心血管并发症的治疗方法。我们提供的证据表明,受辐射的肿瘤的分泌组包含对心脏组织产生全身、远程影响的因子,可能使其易患 CVD。我们建议不同学科如何利用相关的最先进方法在可行的实验工作流程中,阐明放射治疗相关性心脏毒性的分子机制,并理清癌症治疗的理想免疫原性与其对心脏组织的有害影响。这种高度协作努力的结果有望转化为新一代方案,最大限度地控制肿瘤,最大限度地减少心血管并发症,并支持癌症幸存者的生活质量。