(Press-News.org) As breast cancer survival rates continue to climb — 4.3 million women in the U.S. are currently living with a history of the disease and in the next 10 years that number is expected to rise by another million — heart health has become an increasingly important part of survivorship care.
Certain breast cancer therapies, while lifesaving, can also place stress on the heart, raising important questions about who might benefit from closer monitoring.
But does every breast cancer survivor need to see a cardiologist?
A new editorial published in JAMA Oncology and led by UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center investigators Patricia Ganz, MD, a distinguished professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, and Eric Yang, MD, director and founder of the UCLA Cardio-Oncology Program, says the answer is more nuanced than many might expect.
“Current cardio-oncology guidelines recommend cardiac imaging during and immediately following systemic cancer therapies in breast cancer and other malignant neoplasms, but long-term surveillance with these approaches has not been evaluated and evidence-based guidelines are lacking,” the UCLA authors write. Biomarker tests, such as B-type natriuretic peptide, show promise, but their usefulness in cancer survivors remains uncertain.
Understanding the link between cancer treatment and the heart
Some breast cancer therapies, including anthracycline chemotherapy and HER2-targeted drugs like Herceptin (trastuzumab), are known to stress the heart in certain patients. For years, doctors have monitored patients during treatment to catch early signs of heart dysfunction.
However, it’s unclear how long survivors should continue to be monitored once treatment ends, and whether all survivors would benefit from seeing a cardiologist.
In the editorial, Dr. Ganz and Dr. Yang evaluated a study that introduced a new tool to help pinpoint which breast cancer survivors face the highest chances of developing heart failure or cardiomyopathy in the decade following treatment. The team created a risk calculator using real-world clinical data from more than 26,000 breast cancer patients within an integrated health care system in Southern California.
The findings revealed that while certain breast cancer treatments, including anthracycline chemotherapy and HER2-targeted drugs, did increase risk, most women do not go on to develop serious cardiac disease. Instead, the strongest predictors had less to do with cancer and more to do with overall health.
Most women 65 years and older included in the study were at high risk of heart disease, independent of cancer therapy. High blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, smoking, and a history of heart disease contributed more to a woman’s long-term heart outlook than the chemotherapy regimen did.
The authors also found that cancer treatment alone rarely pushed younger women into a high-risk category, with few women younger than 40 at the time of diagnosis at increased risk, suggesting that routine long-term cardiac imaging for all survivors may not be warranted.
So, who should see a cardiologist?
"It depends!" said Dr. Ganz and Dr. Yang.
Women who may benefit from seeing a cardiologist include those who received higher-risk chemotherapy, developed heart issues during treatment, are older or have multiple cardiovascular risk factors, or report symptoms like shortness of breath, fatigue or swelling.
Instead of blanket heart screening for every survivor, the editorial highlights the importance of essentials: controlling blood pressure, managing cholesterol, maintaining a healthy weight and knowing early warning signs of heart disease.
For most survivors, regular visits with a primary care clinician, combined with an oncologist’s input, may be sufficient.
"What all breast cancer survivors need is access to primary care that focuses on prevention or management of established cardiac risk factors, as well as regular clinical assessment of their functioning," wrote Dr. Ganz and Dr. Yang. "With attention to cardiac prevention and control, heart failure/cardiomyopathy is less likely to occur."
END
Detecting heart issues in breast cancer survivors
Heart disease is an increasing concern for breast cancer survivors, and UCLA experts stress preventive care and targeted monitoring to lower long-term cardiac risk.
2025-11-04
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Moffitt study finds promising first evidence of targeted therapy for NRAS-mutant melanoma
2025-11-04
Moffitt Cancer Center researchers report the first clinical activity of a RAS inhibitor in patients with NRAS-mutant melanoma.
The investigational drug daraxonrasib (RMC-6236) and its preclinical counterpart RMC-7977 bind active RAS proteins (NRAS, HRAS, KRAS) and block downstream signaling that drives tumor growth, survival and immune escape.
In laboratory models, treatment led to increased infiltration of activated T cells, reduction of suppressive immune cells and tumor eradication only when the immune ...
Lay intuition as effective at jailbreaking AI chatbots as technical methods
2025-11-04
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — It doesn’t take technical expertise to work around the built-in guardrails of artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots like ChatGPT and Gemini, which are intended to ensure that the chatbots operate within a set of legal and ethical boundaries and do not discriminate against people of a certain age, race or gender. A single, intuitive question can trigger the same biased response from an AI model as advanced technical inquiries, according to a team led by researchers at Penn State.
“A lot of research on AI bias has relied on sophisticated ...
USC researchers use AI to uncover genetic blueprint of the brain’s largest communication bridge
2025-11-04
For the first time, a research team led by the Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute (Stevens INI) at the Keck School of Medicine of USC has mapped the genetic architecture of a crucial part of the human brain known as the corpus callosum—the thick band of nerve fibers that connects the brain’s left and right hemispheres. The findings open new pathways for discoveries about mental illness, neurological disorders and other diseases related to defects in this part of the brain.
The corpus callosum is critical for nearly everything the brain does, from coordinating ...
Tiny swarms, big impact: Researchers engineering adaptive magnetic systems for medicine, energy and environment
2025-11-04
Rice University is partnering with researchers at the University of Washington, Columbia University and Louisiana State University on a $2 million award from the National Science Foundation to revolutionize how materials and microrobots can be designed, controlled and applied in real-world environments.
Funded through NSF’s Designing Materials to Revolutionize and Engineer our Future (DMREF) program, the four-year project — Adaptive and Responsive Magnetic Swarms (ARMS) — aims to create microscopic robotic swarms that move and think collectively, much like schools of fish or flocks of birds.
Led by principal investigator Zach ...
MSU study: How can AI personas be used to detect human deception?
2025-11-04
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Can an AI persona detect when a human is lying – and should we trust it if it can? Artificial intelligence, or AI, has had many recent advances and continues t evolve in scope and capability. A new Michigan State University–led study is diving deeper into how well AI can understand humans by using it to detect human deception.
In the study, published in the Journal of Communication, researchers from MSU and the University of Oklahoma conducted 12 experiments with over 19,000 AI participants to examine how well AI personas were ...
Slowed by sound: A mouse model of Parkinson’s Disease shows noise affects movement
2025-11-04
In the development of Parkinson’s disease, it may not be a good idea to turn the amp to 11. High-volume noise exposure produced motor deficits in a mouse model of early-stage Parkinson’s disease, and established a link between the auditory processing and movement areas of the brain, according to a study published November 4th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Pei Zhang from the Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, China, and colleagues.
The environment can play an important role in the development of Parkinson’s disease, but how sound volume in particular might impact the severity of symptoms was unknown. To understand how ...
Demographic shifts could boost drug-resistant infections across Europe
2025-11-04
The rates of bloodstream infections caused by drug-resistant bacteria will increase substantially across Europe in the next five years, driven largely by aging populations, according to a new paper published November 4th in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine by Gwenan Knight of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK, and colleagues.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global public health crisis. To effectively target interventions and track progress toward international goals, accurately estimating how the AMR burden will change over time is necessary.
In ...
Insight into how sugars regulate the inflammatory disease process
2025-11-04
New research has updated our understanding of how sugars, known as glycans, help immune cells move into skin in the inflammatory disease, psoriasis.
The paper entitled “Leukocytes have a heparan sulfate glycocalyx that regulates recruitment during psoriasis-like skin inflammation” published in the journal Science Signaling.
The lead authors are Dr Amy Saunders from Lancaster University and Dr Douglas Dyer from the University of Manchester, with their joint PhD student, ...
PKU scientists uncover climate impacts and future trends of hailstorms in China
2025-11-04
Peking University, November 4, 2025: A research team led by Professor Zhang Qinghong and Li Rumeng from the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at Peking University (PKU) School of Physics, has found that hailstorms in China have surged since the Industrial Revolution, likely due to human-driven climate warming. The study, published in Nature Communications in September 2025, combines historical records, meteorological data, and artificial intelligence to track long-term hailstorm trends.
Why It Matters:
Hail can fall fast and hit hard. Apart from smashing crops and damaging homes, it may even endanger lives. After 2024’s record-breaking ...
Computer model mimics human audiovisual perception
2025-11-04
A neural computation first discovered in insects has been shown to explain how humans combine sight and sound – even when illusions trick us into “hearing” what we do not see. Now, researcher Dr Cesare Parise from the University of Liverpool, UK, has created a biologically grounded model based on this computation, which can take in real-life audiovisual information instead of more abstract parameters used in previous models.
Parise’s research, published today in eLife as the final Version of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Sylvester researchers lead major treatment overhauls for acute myeloid leukemia
New global guidelines streamline environmental microbiome research
Small changes make some AI systems more brain-like than others
Asia PGI and partners unveil preview of PathGen: New AI-powered outbreak intelligence tool
Groundbreaking technique unlocks secrets of bacterial shape-shifting
Studies reevaluate reverse weathering process, shifts understanding of global climate
What time is it on Mars? NIST physicists have the answer
Findings suggest red planet was warmer, wetter millions of years ago
Renewable lignin waste transformed into powerful catalyst for clean hydrogen production
UTEP researcher finds potential new treatment for aggressive ovarian cancer
Everyday repellent, global pollutant
Iron fortified hemp biochar helps keep “forever chemicals” out of radishes and the food chain
Corticosteroid use does not appear to increase infectious complications in non-COVID-19 pneumonia
All life copies DNA unambiguously into proteins. Archaea may be the exception.
A new possibility for life: Study suggests ancient skies rained down ingredients
Coral reefs have stabilized Earth’s carbon cycle for the past 250 million years
Francisco José Sánchez-Sesma selected as 2026 Joyner Lecturer
In recognition of World AIDS Day 2025, Gregory Folkers and Anthony Fauci reflect on progress made in antiretroviral treatments and prevention of HIV/AIDS, highlighting promising therapeutic developmen
Treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS: Unfinished business
Drug that costs as little as 50 cents per day could save hospitals thousands, McMaster study finds
Health risks of air pollution from stubble burning poorly understood in various parts of Punjab, India
How fast you can walk before hip surgery may determine how well you recover
Roadmap for reducing, reusing, and recycling in space
Long-term HIV control: Could this combination therapy be the key?
Home hospital care demonstrates success in rural communities
Hospital-level care at home for adults living in rural settings
Health care access outcomes for immigrant children and state insurance policy
Change in weight status from childhood to young adulthood and risk of adult coronary heart disease
Researchers discover latent antimicrobial resistance across the world
Machine learning identifies senescence-inducing compound for p16-positive cancer cells
[Press-News.org] Detecting heart issues in breast cancer survivorsHeart disease is an increasing concern for breast cancer survivors, and UCLA experts stress preventive care and targeted monitoring to lower long-term cardiac risk.