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Enhancing Prediction of Cancer Therapy-Related Cardiomyopathy From Surveillance Echocardiograms: A Children's Oncology Group Study.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Leger, KJ; Stratton, KL; Sachdeva, R; Armenian, SH; Bhat, AH; Boyle, PM; Edwards, LA; Meacham, LR; Narasimhan, S; Nathan, PC; Sadak, KT ...
Published in: JACC Adv
December 2025

BACKGROUND: Early echocardiographic indicators of cardiac remodeling may enhance cardiomyopathy risk prediction in childhood cancer survivors (CCS). OBJECTIVES: The objective of the study was to assess whether influential echocardiographic measures can be combined to develop a robust cardiomyopathy risk prediction model in CCS. METHODS: Multicenter retrospective study of ≥1-year CCS with digitally archived surveillance echocardiograms, enrolled cardiomyopathy cases (left ventricular [LV] fractional shortening ≤28% or LV ejection fraction ≤50% on ≥2 occasions) and noncases (≥5-year CCS who maintained fractional shortening ≥ 30% and ejection fraction ≥55% without initiation of cardiac medications). Echocardiograms were centrally quantitated in a blinded fashion. Least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression identified the most influential 2-year predictors of cardiomyopathy among 27 echocardiographic parameters. Logistic regression was used to generate ORs with 95% CIs. Estimates were applied to the training and test data sets to generate area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC). RESULTS: Data from 146 CCS (52 cases; 94 noncases) with a median follow-up of 9.3 years post-cancer diagnosis and a total of 281 echocardiograms were included. A set of 7 echocardiographic measures were identified as the most influential predictors, with AUC of 0.82 (95% CI: 0.74-0.89) and 0.85 (95% CI: 0.74-0.95) in the training and test data sets, respectively. LV end-systolic dimension (ORmm: 1.2; 95% CI: 1.1-1.4), apical 4-chamber longitudinal strain (OR%: 1.2; 95% CI: 1.0-1.3), and septal A' velocity (ORcm/s: 1.3; 95% CI: 1.1-1.6) were strongly predictive of cardiomyopathy. AUCs were similar if cancer treatment exposures were included. CONCLUSIONS: Early abnormalities in echocardiographic parameters of structure and function predict subsequent cardiomyopathy in CCS and can identify high-risk survivors who warrant early intervention.

Duke Scholars

Published In

JACC Adv

DOI

EISSN

2772-963X

Publication Date

December 2025

Volume

4

Issue

12 Pt 2

Start / End Page

102363

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Leger, K. J., Stratton, K. L., Sachdeva, R., Armenian, S. H., Bhat, A. H., Boyle, P. M., … Chow, E. J. (2025). Enhancing Prediction of Cancer Therapy-Related Cardiomyopathy From Surveillance Echocardiograms: A Children's Oncology Group Study. JACC Adv, 4(12 Pt 2), 102363. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacadv.2025.102363
Leger, Kasey J., Kayla L. Stratton, Ritu Sachdeva, Saro H. Armenian, Aarti H. Bhat, Patrick M. Boyle, Lindsay A. Edwards, et al. “Enhancing Prediction of Cancer Therapy-Related Cardiomyopathy From Surveillance Echocardiograms: A Children's Oncology Group Study.JACC Adv 4, no. 12 Pt 2 (December 2025): 102363. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacadv.2025.102363.
Leger KJ, Stratton KL, Sachdeva R, Armenian SH, Bhat AH, Boyle PM, et al. Enhancing Prediction of Cancer Therapy-Related Cardiomyopathy From Surveillance Echocardiograms: A Children's Oncology Group Study. JACC Adv. 2025 Dec;4(12 Pt 2):102363.
Leger, Kasey J., et al. “Enhancing Prediction of Cancer Therapy-Related Cardiomyopathy From Surveillance Echocardiograms: A Children's Oncology Group Study.JACC Adv, vol. 4, no. 12 Pt 2, Dec. 2025, p. 102363. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.jacadv.2025.102363.
Leger KJ, Stratton KL, Sachdeva R, Armenian SH, Bhat AH, Boyle PM, Edwards LA, Meacham LR, Narasimhan S, Nathan PC, Sadak KT, Sharma S, Border WL, Leisenring WM, Chow EJ. Enhancing Prediction of Cancer Therapy-Related Cardiomyopathy From Surveillance Echocardiograms: A Children's Oncology Group Study. JACC Adv. 2025 Dec;4(12 Pt 2):102363.

Published In

JACC Adv

DOI

EISSN

2772-963X

Publication Date

December 2025

Volume

4

Issue

12 Pt 2

Start / End Page

102363

Location

United States