Artículos de revistas
Characterization Of The Changes In Cardiac Structure And Function In Mice Treated With Anthracyclines Using Serial Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Registro en:
Circulation-cardiovascular Imaging. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, v. 9, p. , 2016.
1941-9651
1942-0080
WOS:000391822800001
10.1161/CIRCIMAGING.115.003584
Autor
Farhad
Hoshang; Staziaki
Pedro V.; Addison
Daniel; Coelho-Filho
Otavio R.; Shah
Ravi V.; Mitchell
Richard N.; Szilveszter
Balint; Abbasi
Siddique A.; Kwong
Raymond Y.; Scherrer-Crosbie
Marielle; Hoffmann
Udo; Jerosch-Herold
Michael; Neilan
Tomas G.
Institución
Resumen
Anthracyclines are cardiotoxic; however, there are limited data characterizing the serial changes in cardiac structure and function after anthracyclines. The aim of this study was to use cardiac magnetic resonance to characterize anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity in mice. Methods and Results This was a longitudinal cardiac magnetic resonance and histological study of 45 wild-type male mice randomized to doxorubicin (n=30, 5 mg/kg of doxorubicin/week for 5 weeks) or placebo (n=15). A cardiac magnetic resonance was performed at Baseline and at 5, 10, and 20 weeks after randomization. Measures of primary interest included left ventricular ejection fraction, myocardial edema (multiecho short-axis spin-echo acquisition), and myocardial fibrosis (Look-Locker gradient echo). In doxorubicin-treated mice versus placebo, there was an increase in myocardial edema at 5 weeks (T2 values of 32 4 versus 21 3 ms; P<0.05), followed by a reduction in left ventricular ejection fraction (54 6 versus 63 +/- 5%; P<0.05) and an increase in myocardial fibrosis (extracellular volume of 0.34 +/- 0.03 versus 0.27 +/- 0.03; P<0.05) at 10 weeks. There was a strong association between the early (5 weeks) increase in edema and the subacute (10 weeks) increase in fibrosis (r=0.90; P<0.001). Both the increase in edema and fibrosis predicted the late doxorubicin-induced mortality in mice (P<0.001). Conclusions Our data suggest that, in mice, anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity is associated with an early increase in cardiac edema and a subsequent increase in myocardial fibrosis. The early increase in edema and subacute increase in fibrosis are strongly linked and are both predictive of late mortality. 9 12 American Heart Association [12FTF12060588]