NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07408362
Early Diagnosis and Cardiovascular Risk Stratification in Children Exposed to Cancer Therapies
The goal of this prospective interventional study is to improve the detection of subclinical chronic Cancer Therapy-Related Cardiovascular Toxicity (CTRCT) and evaluate the added value of advanced cardioechography, ergospirometry, and specific biomarkers in pediatric cancer survivors (aged 2 to 25) who received potentially cardiotoxic treatments (chemotherapy/thoracic radiotherapy). The main questions it aims to answer are:
* Can advanced echocardiography (including strain and myocardial work), ECG, and ergospirometry effectively diagnose earlier subclinical cardiac impairment in this population?
* What is the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors (including physical activity levels and biological markers like proBNP/troponins)
* Can new genetic or biological markers be identified to help optimizing the detection of CTRCT?
At time of follow-up, if they agree, participants will:
* Complete validated questionnaires regarding quality of life, physical activity, and sedentary behavior.
* Undergo a cardiopulmonary exercise test (ergospirometry) for those aged over 8 years.
* Wear an accelerometer (ActiGraph GT3X) for 7 consecutive days to monitor physical activity.
* Provide an additional blood sample during routine follow-up for the creation of a biobank dedicated to analyzing markers of senescence, fibrosis, apoptosis, and genetic polymorphisms.
Gender: All
Ages: 2 Years - 25 Years
Cancer Therapy-related Cardiovascular Toxicity
Childhood Cancer
Chemotherapeutic Toxicity
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