Heart risks high in childhood cancer survivors
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Children who survive cancer while they are young are five to 10 times more likely than their healthy siblings to develop heart disease, U.S. researchers said on Thursday.
The finding comes from a study of more than 14,000 survivors of childhood cancers, and suggests that cancer survivors and their doctors need to be vigilant about heart risks.
"This study clearly shows for children, and particularly children treated with radiation therapy to the chest or certain drugs that are particularly toxic to the heart, there are significant risks of cardiovascular disease at a far younger-than-expected age," said Dr. Richard Schilsky of the University of Chicago.
The preliminary results were released ahead of a meeting later this month of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Schilsky, who is president-elect of ASCO, said the study highlights the challenges faced by cancer survivors, who have to live with the health consequences of having had cancer and having been treated for cancer.
Dr. Daniel Mulrooney of the University of Minnesota and colleagues conducted the study, which looked at 14,358 survivors of childhood leukemia, central nervous system tumors, Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, kidney tumors, bone cancers, neuroblastoma and soft-tissue sarcoma between 1970 and 1986.
They compared these to 3,899 of their siblings. Cancer survivors on average were 7 years old at diagnosis and 27 at follow up.
The cancer survivors were 10 times more likely to have clogged arteries, 5.7 times more likely to have heart failure, 4.9 times more likely to have heart attacks, 6.3 times more likely to have pericardial disease -- affecting the sac surrounding the heart -- and 4.8 times more likely to have diseased heart valves compared with their siblings. Continued...






