TY - JOUR
T1 - Report on the International Colloquium on cardio-oncology (Rome, 12-14 March 2014)
AU - Ewer, Michael
AU - Gianni, Luca
AU - Pane, Fabrizio
AU - Sandri, Maria Teresa
AU - Steiner, Rudolf K.
AU - Wojnowski, Leszek
AU - Yeh, Edward T.
AU - Carver, Joseph R.
AU - Lipshultz, Steven E.
AU - Minotti, Giorgio
AU - Armstrong, Gregory T.
AU - Cardinale, Daniela
AU - Colan, Steven D.
AU - Darby, Sarah C.
AU - Force, Thomas L.
AU - Kremer, Leontien C.M.
AU - Lenihan, Daniel J.
AU - Sallan, Stephen E.
AU - Sawyer, Douglas B.
AU - Suter, Thomas M.
AU - Swain, Sandra M.
AU - Van Leeuwen, Flora E.
PY - 2014/5/29
Y1 - 2014/5/29
N2 - Cardio-oncology is a relatively new discipline that focuses on the cardiovascular sequelae of anti-tumour drugs. As any other young adolescent discipline, cardio-oncology struggles to define its scientific boundaries and to identify best standards of care for cancer patients or survivors at risk of cardiovascular events. The International Colloquium on Cardio-Oncology was held in Rome, Italy, 12-14 March 2014, with the aim of illuminating controversial issues and unmet needs in modern cardio-oncology. This colloquium embraced contributions from different kind of disciplines (oncology and cardiology but also paediatrics, geriatrics, genetics, and translational research); in fact, cardio-oncology goes way beyond the merging of cardiology with oncology. Moreover, the colloquium programme did not review cardiovascular toxicity from one drug or the other, rather it looked at patients as we see them in their fight against cancer and eventually returning to everyday life. This represents the melting pot in which anti-cancer therapies, genetic backgrounds, and risk factors conspire in producing cardiovascular sequelae, and this calls for screening programmes and well-designed platforms of collaboration between one key professional figure and another. The International Colloquium on Cardio-Oncology was promoted by the Menarini International Foundation and co-chaired by Giorgio Minotti (Rome), Joseph R Carver (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States), and Steven E Lipshultz (Detroit, Michigan, United States). The programme was split into five sessions of broad investigational and clinical relevance (what is cardiotoxicity?, cardiotoxicity in children, adolescents, and young adults, cardiotoxicity in adults, cardiotoxicity in special populations, and the future of cardio-oncology). Here, the colloquium chairs and all the session chairs briefly summarised what was said at the colloquium. Topics and controversies were reported on behalf of all members of the working group of the International Colloquium on Cardio-Oncology.
AB - Cardio-oncology is a relatively new discipline that focuses on the cardiovascular sequelae of anti-tumour drugs. As any other young adolescent discipline, cardio-oncology struggles to define its scientific boundaries and to identify best standards of care for cancer patients or survivors at risk of cardiovascular events. The International Colloquium on Cardio-Oncology was held in Rome, Italy, 12-14 March 2014, with the aim of illuminating controversial issues and unmet needs in modern cardio-oncology. This colloquium embraced contributions from different kind of disciplines (oncology and cardiology but also paediatrics, geriatrics, genetics, and translational research); in fact, cardio-oncology goes way beyond the merging of cardiology with oncology. Moreover, the colloquium programme did not review cardiovascular toxicity from one drug or the other, rather it looked at patients as we see them in their fight against cancer and eventually returning to everyday life. This represents the melting pot in which anti-cancer therapies, genetic backgrounds, and risk factors conspire in producing cardiovascular sequelae, and this calls for screening programmes and well-designed platforms of collaboration between one key professional figure and another. The International Colloquium on Cardio-Oncology was promoted by the Menarini International Foundation and co-chaired by Giorgio Minotti (Rome), Joseph R Carver (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States), and Steven E Lipshultz (Detroit, Michigan, United States). The programme was split into five sessions of broad investigational and clinical relevance (what is cardiotoxicity?, cardiotoxicity in children, adolescents, and young adults, cardiotoxicity in adults, cardiotoxicity in special populations, and the future of cardio-oncology). Here, the colloquium chairs and all the session chairs briefly summarised what was said at the colloquium. Topics and controversies were reported on behalf of all members of the working group of the International Colloquium on Cardio-Oncology.
KW - Antitumor therapies
KW - Cardio-oncology
KW - Cardiovascular sequelae
KW - Patients
KW - Survivors
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84901932219&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3332/ecancer.2014.433
DO - 10.3332/ecancer.2014.433
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84901932219
SN - 1754-6605
VL - 8
JO - ecancermedicalscience
JF - ecancermedicalscience
IS - 1
M1 - 433
ER -