News | Cardiac Imaging | December 17, 2025

Valvular Heart Disease is Common in Cancer Patients; Interventions Help Improve Survival Rate

A retrospective observational study found that valvular heart disease, detected by cardiovascular imaging, was common in patients with a previous cancer diagnosis. Interventions to treat valvular heart disease were infrequent; however, when performed, they significantly improved survival.


Dec. 11 2025 — Valvular heart disease, identified through cardiovascular imaging, is common in cancer patients. Interventions to treat valvular heart disease significantly improved survival.1 These findings were presented at EACVI 2025, the flagship congress of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI), a branch of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).

Treatment advances have led to improved survival for patients with cancer. As patients live longer, they are at an increased risk of developing valvular heart disease after successful cancer therapy. Furthermore, it is now well recognized that certain cancer treatments can cause cardiovascular toxicity that may lead to premature morbidity among cancer survivors.2

“Cardiovascular complications are becoming increasingly relevant in older patients after successful cancer therapy. For example, we already know that anthracycline chemotherapy causes heart failure and might lead to tricuspid and mitral valve regurgitation,” explained study presenter, Dr. Maximilian Autherith from the Medical University of Vienna, Austria, who continued: “There is limited evidence to guide the most appropriate management plan for cancer patients with concomitant valvular heart disease, for instance, whether patients benefit from valvular interventions to a similar extent as patients without cancer.” The CESAR study sought to determine the prevalence of valvular heart disease in patients with cancer, describe the frequency of valve interventions and evaluate the impact of interventions on survival.

The observational cohort study included 10,353 adult patients with a confirmed cancer diagnosis who had undergone transthoracic echocardiography within 12 months at a tertiary referral center. The mean age of the population was 66.2 years and around half (46.6%) were female.The researchers found that 7.2% of patients had severe valvular heart disease, most commonly tricuspid regurgitation (3.7%), mitral regurgitation (2.6%) and aortic stenosis (2.2%). After adjustment for age, sex, levels of cardiac biomarkers, kidney function and left ventricular function, severe valvular heart disease was found to be an independent predictor of increased mortality (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 1.46; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.25–1.71) and cardiovascular death (adjusted HR 2.62; 95% CI 2.00–3.43).

Among those with severe valvular heart disease, 21.5% underwent a surgical or transcatheter intervention. Notably, a valvular intervention was independently associated with improved survival compared to no valvular intervention, resulting in a 72% mortality reduction (adjusted HR 0.28; 95% CI 0.09–0.87) after a median follow-up of 23 months.

Summing up the findings, Dr. Autherith said, “Severe valvular heart disease was prevalent in this selected population of cancer patients who underwent echocardiography. Only a small proportion of patients underwent interventions to treat valvular heart disease, but when they did, the impact on survival was considerable. Our findings highlight the need to refer cancer patients for regular cardiovascular monitoring and also suggest that interventions for valvular heart disease do not need to be withheld in this population. The next steps include further analysis of different administered cancer treatments and performed interventions.”

References: 

  1. "Valvular heart disease in cancer patients - prevalence, relevance, and therapeutic management - preliminary results from the CESAR study" presented during the Role of echocardiography on cardio-oncology session on 11 December at 10:30 to 11:15 CET in Moderated ePoster 1.
  2. Lyon AR, López-Fernández T, Couch LS, et al. 2022 ESC Guidelines on cardio-oncology developed in collaboration with the European Hematology Association (EHA), the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology (ESTRO) and the International Cardio-Oncology Society (ICOS). Eur Heart J. 2022;43:4229–4361.

Related Content

News | Cardiac Imaging

Feb. 26, 2026 — The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has given 510(k) class II clearance of qXR-Detect, the ...

Home February 26, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Feb. 13, 2026 — Conavi Medical Corp. recently highlighted the publication of new peer-reviewed research titled “Deep ...

Home February 16, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 27. 2026 — Circle Cardiovascular Imaging Inc. has announced the release of cvi42 v6.4, the latest version of its ...

Home January 28, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 6, 2026 — UltraSight, a provider of AI-guided cardiac imaging workflows, has announced FDA clearance to expand its ...

Home January 16, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 12, 2026 — YorLabs, Inc., a medical technology company providing next-generation intracardiac imaging solutions for ...

Home January 13, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Jan. 7, 2026 — UltraSight, a provider of AI-guided cardiac imaging workflows, has partnered with Jefferson Health, one ...

Home January 08, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Dec. 12, 2025 — Increased volume of epicardial adipose tissue, detected by cardiovascular imaging, was found to be ...

Home January 02, 2026
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Nov. 30, 2025 – Ascend Cardiovascular, a provider of purpose-built enterprise imaging for cardiology, and Konica Minolta ...

Home December 09, 2025
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Dec. 1, 2025 — Cleerly, a provider of AI-based cardiovascular imaging, will showcase new product updates at RSNA 2025 ...

Home December 02, 2025
Home
News | Cardiac Imaging

Nov. 30, 2025 — KA Imaging Technology has announced that its Reveal 35C detector with SpectralDR technology will be ...

Home December 01, 2025
Home
Subscribe Now