Doxorubicin and other anthracyclines are commonly used to treat breast cancer and other types of cancer. Unfortunately, they can cause heart muscle damage, resulting in scarring, abnormal contraction and relaxation, and heart failure symptoms. This side effect occurs more frequently at higher doses, and limits the total dose that can be given to cancer patients. Eplerenone is an oral medication that prevents or reverses heart damage in other disease states, and is commonly used to treat heart failure. This study will investigate the use of eplerenone to protect the heart from these harmful side effects of doxorubicin. Few therapies have been shown to prevent heart damage in patients receiving anthracyclines. Small studies have suggested that other heart failure medications (ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers) may reduce the incidence of cardiac toxicity, but eplerenone and other drugs in its class (aldosterone antagonists) have not previously been studied. Eplerenone inhibits enzyme pathways that cause scarring of the heart, and animal studies suggest that anthracyclines cause damage through these same pathways. This study aims to investigate whether eplerenone protects the heart from the harmful effects of doxorubicin chemotherapy. Specifically, it will measure the effect that eplerenone has on heart muscle relaxation. It will randomly assign women undergoing chemotherapy with doxorubicin to one of two groups: one group will receive eplerenone, and the other group will receive placebo (sugar) pills. The subjects will not know which type of pills they are taking. Heart muscle relaxation will be measured at baseline, after completion of chemotherapy (8-12 weeks), and after 6 months. There will also be various blood tests measured in the study subjects, to determine whether there might be certain blood tests that identify patients at particularly high risk of heart toxicity after doxorubicin therapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
44
British Columbia Cancer Agency, Vancouver Centre
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Change in average E' (averaged septal E' and lateral E')
The average early diastolic tissue velocity of the mitral valve annulus measured by tissue Doppler echocardiography (averaged velocities of the mitral annulus measured at the lateral edge and the septal edge)
Time frame: 6 months
Development of worsening diastolic function
Development of worsening diastolic function, defined as a decline by at least one American Society of Echocardiography gradation of diastolic dysfunction
Time frame: 6 months
Development of worsening systolic function
Development of worsening systolic function, defined as a decline in LVEF of ≥10% to ≤50%
Time frame: 6 months
Change in septal E'
Change in early diastolic tissue velocity of the septal mitral annulus (E', measured by tissue Doppler echocardiography)
Time frame: 6 months
Change in lateral E'
Change in early diastolic tissue velocity of the lateral mitral annulus (E', measured by tissue Doppler echocardiography)
Time frame: 6 months
Change in E/E'
Change in the ratio of early diastolic mitral inflow velocity (E, measured by pulse wave Doppler echocardiography) to the average early diastolic tissue velocity of the mitral annulus (E', measured by tissue Doppler echocardiography)
Time frame: 6 months
Change in E/A
Change in the ratio of peak early diastolic mitral inflow velocity (E) to peak mitral inflow velocity during atrial systole (A), both measured by pulse wave Doppler echocardiography
Time frame: 6 months
Change in left atrial volume index
Change in the left atrial volume index, defined as the left atrial volume measured on the 2D echocardiogram indexed to body surface area
Time frame: 6 months
Change in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF)
Change in LVEF, measured by echocardiogram using Simpson's method
Time frame: 6 months
Biomarkers
Change in biomarkers of myocardial injury, inflammation, and collagen turnover as predictors of cardiotoxicity
Time frame: Baseline, 1 week, 2 weeks, 4 weeks, 6 months
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