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Cancer therapy-induced cardiomyopathy: can human induced pluripotent stem cell modelling help prevent it?

期刊

EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL
卷 40, 期 22, 页码 1764-1770

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx811

关键词

Cardio-oncology; Chemotherapy; Induced pluripotent stem cells; Genomics; Precision medicine

资金

  1. American Heart Association (AHA) [17MERIT33610009]
  2. Burroughs Wellcome Fund [1015009]
  3. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 HL113006, NIH R01 HL123968, NIH R01 HL132875, NIH R01 HL126527, NIH T32 OD011121, NIH K01 HL135455]
  4. Stanford Translational Research and Applied Medicine (TRAM) scholar grant
  5. AHA [13SDG17340025]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Cardiotoxic effects from cancer therapy are a major cause of morbidity during cancer treatment. Unexpected toxicity can occur during treatment and/or after completion of therapy, into the time of cancer survivorship. While older drugs such as anthracyclines have well-known cardiotoxic effects, newer drugs such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors, proteasome inhibitors, and immunotherapies also can cause diverse cardiovascular and metabolic complications. Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) are increasingly being used as instruments for disease modelling, drug discovery, and mechanistic toxicity studies. Promising results with hiPSC-CM chemotherapy studies are raising hopes for improving cancer therapies through personalized medicine and safer drug development. Here, we review the cardiotoxicity profiles of common chemotherapeutic agents as well as efforts to model them in vitro using hiPSC-CMs.

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