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Narrative review on anthracycline cardiorenal toxicity and dexrazoxane protection

Narrative review on anthracycline cardiorenal toxicity and dexrazoxane protection
Photo by Navy Medicine / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Consider the limited evidence for dexrazoxane's renoprotection in anthracycline therapy.

This is a narrative review examining anthracycline therapy in oncology clinics and its associated cardiorenal toxicity, including cardiac and renal dysfunction. The authors synthesize existing evidence on dexrazoxane as a protective agent, noting that its renoprotective effect remains limited.

The review highlights a key gap: no clear guidelines or standardized strategies exist for preventing or managing anthracycline-induced cardiorenal toxicity. The authors argue for developing a comprehensive strategy to protect both cardiac and renal function, providing a scientific foundation for safer and more effective cancer treatment regimens.

Limitations acknowledged by the authors include the absence of standardized prevention strategies and the limited evidence for dexrazoxane's renoprotective effect. The review does not report specific study populations, sample sizes, intervention details, or adverse event rates.

Practice relevance is framed around developing protective strategies, but the narrative nature of the review and noted evidence gaps mean conclusions are preliminary. Clinicians should interpret these findings as a call for further research rather than a directive for immediate practice change.

Study Details

Study typeSystematic review
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
In oncology clinics, anthracyclines remain a cornerstone of cancer therapy. However, their clinical benefits are accompanied by substantial toxicities. As cumulative exposure increases and patient survival improves, the incidence of treatment-related adverse effects also increases, particularly those affecting the heart and kidneys. Rather than existing in isolation, these two forms of damage often interact: impaired cardiac function can accelerate renal injury through hemodynamic changes and neuroendocrine activation, whereas renal dysfunction further exacerbates cardiac injury via toxin accumulation and inflammation. This interaction leads to the well-recognized cardiorenal vicious cycle, which substantially limits the safe use of anthracyclines in clinical practice. Although dexrazoxane is currently the only approved cardioprotective agent, its renoprotective effect remains limited. Moreover, there are no clear guidelines or standardized strategies for preventing or managing anthracycline-induced cardiorenal toxicity. Therefore, a deeper understanding of the underlying mechanisms, along with effective monitoring and intervention strategies, is crucial for optimizing anthracycline therapy and improving patient survival. This review explores the pathological basis, molecular mechanisms, risk factors, monitoring approaches, and treatment strategies related to anthracycline-induced cardiorenal toxicity. It aims to develop a comprehensive strategy to protect both cardiac and renal function and to provide a scientific foundation for the development of safer and more effective cancer treatment regimens.
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