Cardio-Oncology Services: rationale, organization, and implementation A report from the ESC Cardio-Oncology council
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Anticancer therapies have extended the lives of millions of patients with malignancies, but for some this benefit is tempered by adverse cardiovascular (CV) effects. Cardiotoxicity may occur early or late after treatment initiation or termination. The extent of this cardiotoxicity is variable, depending on the type of drug used, combination with other drugs, mediastinal radiotherapy, the presence of CV risk factors, and comorbidities. A recent position paper from the European Society of Cardiology addressed the management of CV monitoring and management of patients treated for cancer.
The current document is focused on the basis of the Cardio-Oncology (C-O) Services, presenting their rationale, organization, and implementation. C-O Services address the spectrum of prevention, detection, monitoring, and treatment of cancer patients at risk of cardiotoxicity and/or with concomitant CV diseases. These services require a multidisciplinary approach, with the aims of promoting CV health and facilitating the most effective cancer therapy.
The expected growing volume of patients with cancer at risk of developing/worsening CV disease, the advent of new technological opportunities to refine diagnosis, and the necessity of early recognition of cancer therapy-related toxicity mandate an integrative multidisciplinary approach and care in a specialized environment. This document from the ESC Cardio-Oncology council proposes the grounds for creating C-O Services in Europe based on expert opinion.
Contributors

Thomas M Suter
Author

Teresa López-Fernández
Author

Maurizio Galderisi
Author

Alexander R Lyon
Author

Peter Van der Meer
Author

Alain Cohen Solal
Author

Jose-Luis Zamorano
Author

Guy Jerusalem
Author

Marie Moonen
Author

Victor Aboyans
Author

Jeroen J Bax
Author

Riccardo Asteggiano
Author
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