Argus News | Odisha News Today, ଓଡ଼ିଶା ଖବର , Odisha latest news

Videos
Education Next 2026Register now
|

Argus News - Study Shows Heart Disease Deaths Surge In Patients With Cancer

Health & Wellness

Health / Study Shows Heart Disease Deaths Surge In Patients With Cancer

Hemanta Pande
Browse all articles by Hemanta Pande
·4 months ago·2 min read
Study Shows Heart Disease Deaths Surge In Patients With Cancer
Representative Image

Key Points

  • Study finds cancer patients more likely to die from cardiovascular diseases.
  • Risk linked to inflammation- and coagulation-related protein expression.
  • Nine independent risk factors identified, including age, smoking, and blood pressure.

New Delhi, Jan 5: Patients with cancer are more likely to die from cardiovascular diseases, according to a study.

 

The study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, showed that the risk may be related to altered expression of inflammation and coagulationrelated proteins.

 

The researchers from the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences stressed the need to manage endocrine, kidney, and inflammationrelated risk factors in people with cancer.

 

“Our study found an elevated cardiovascular death in patients with cancer,” said the team.

 

“Patients with cancer need to pay attention to the risk of cardiovascular mortality, particularly among younger individuals and those diagnosed at an early stage; in clinical practice, it is recommended to emphasise the management of endocrine, kidney, and inflammationrelated risk factors in the population with cancer, they added.

 

Previous studies have identified a link between cancer and cardiovascular disease; however, the underlying genetic and proteomic mechanisms remain unclear.

 

Argus News App

📱 Get Argus News App

📰 60 Word News🎬 Argus Podcast📺 Live TV and Breaking News🔔 Free Notification Alerts
Download Free:

Therefore, the new study aimed to investigate the association between cancer diagnosis and cardiovascular mortality and to explore the potential mechanisms involved.

 

The team studied a total of 3,79,944 participants without cardiovascular disease at baseline, including 65,047 individuals with cancer.

 

Genomewide association studies, phenomewide association studies, and proteomic analyses were applied to investigate the underlying genetic and proteomic mechanisms.

 

The results revealed only a limited number of shared genetic variations between cancer and cardiovascular conditions, such as hypertension and cardiac dysrhythmias.

 

The researchers also identified nine independent risk factors for cardiovascular death, including age, sex, smoking, BMI, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, HbA1c, cystatin C, and neutrophil count.

 

Interestingly, the probability of survival from CVD was comparable between participants with and without cancer during the first 10years of followup but declined more sharply thereafter among patients with cancer.

 

This was possibly associated with the reduction in systemic tumour burden and the resolution of inflammation and coagulation disorders following treatment therapies, the team said.

Sponsored
Health | Cancer patients face higher cardiovascular death risk, study reveals | Argus English