Characteristics, management, and outcomes of active cancer patients with cardiogenic shock
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
Characteristics, management, and outcomes of patients with active cancer admitted for cardiogenic shock remain largely unknown. This study aimed to address this issue and identify the determinants of 30-day and 1-year mortality in a large cardiogenic shock cohort of all aetiologies.
FRENSHOCK is a prospective multicenter observational registry conducted in French critical care units between April and October 2016. ‘Active cancer’ was defined as a malignancy diagnosed within the previous weeks with planned or ongoing anticancer therapy. Among the 772 enrolled patients (mean age 65.7 ± 14.9 years; 71.5% male), 51 (6.6%) had active cancer. Among them, the main cancer types were solid cancers (60.8%), and hematological malignancies (27.5%). Solid cancers were mainly urogenital (21.6%), gastrointestinal (15.7%), and lung cancer (9.8%). Medical history, clinical presentation, and baseline echocardiography were almost the same between groups. In-hospital management significantly differed: patients with cancers received more catecholamines or inotropes (norepinephrine 72% vs. 52%,
Active cancer patients accounted for almost 7% of all cases of cardiogenic shock. Early mortality was the same regardless of active cancer or not, whereas long-term mortality was significantly increased in patients with active cancer.
Contributors

Justine Gantzer
Author

Laurent Bonello
Author

Nicolas Lamblin
Author

François Roubille
Author

Bruno Levy
Author

Sebastien Champion
Author

Pascal Lim
Author

Francis Schneider
Author

Alain Cariou
Author

Hadi Khachab
Author

Jeremy Bourenne
Author

Marie-France Seronde
Author

Guillaume Schurtz
Author

Brahim Harbaoui
Author

Gerald Vanzetto
Author

Charlotte Quentin
Author

Jean-Emmanuel Kurtz
Author

Benoit Lattuca
Author

Caroline Biendel
Author

Guillaume Leurent
Author

Vincent Bataille
Author

Eric Bonnefoy
Author

Nadia Aissaoui
Author
You may be interested in







