TURKISH JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY 2022 , Vol 37 , Num 2
Mechanisms of Radiation-induced Cardiovascular Complications
Güler YAVAŞ1
1Department of Radiation Oncology, Başkent University, Ankara-Turkey DOI : 10.5505/tjo.2022.S1002

Summary

Radiation therapy (RT) has contributed to significant improvements with respect to the survival times in many cancers, including Hodgkin"s Lymphoma (HL), breast cancer, lung cancer, and other thoracic region tumors. In addition, the advances of anti-cancer therapies result in greater numbers of long-term survivors after thoracic irradiation as well. Therefore, it has become more important to understand the long-term complications of RT. Radiation-induced cardiovascular complications (RICC) have become an increasingly recognized side effect of RT, which can cause non-malignant death in patients particularly suffering from HL and breast cancer. The spectrum of RICC is broad, potentially involving any component of the heart, including pericardium, myocardium, heart valves, coronary arteries, capillaries, and conducting system that underwent RT, most often occurring decades after the treatment. Numerous studies of RICC show that the injury of endothelial cells is the key point in most tissues that ultimately leads to fibrosis or necrosis. Ionizing radiation directly modifies DNA, including single- and double-strand breaks on a molecular level. Indirectly ionizing radiation also produces reactive oxygen species, which can lead cellular stress and death. Radiation directly affects the vasculature by causing endothelial cell apoptosis and senescence and by changing aspects of normal vascular homeostasis. The mechanism of RICC has not been clearly defined yet. A better understanding of the biological mechanisms of RICC is very important to clarify the exact pathogenesis of this important disease spectrum, and it will also provide to develop novel treatment strategies.