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Glycogen phosphorylase BB as a marker of cardiac toxicity during high-dose chemotherapy followed by hematopoietic cell transplantation

Publication at First Faculty of Medicine |
2007

Abstract

The aim of the study was to assess cardiac toxicity during myeloablative preparative regimen (PR) and hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) with biomarkers of cardiac injury: glycogen phosphorylase BB (GPBB), heart fatty acid binding protein (H-FABP), cardiac troponins (cTnT, cTnI), creatine kinase MB (CK-MB mass), myoglobin. Nineteen patients (mean age 42.8+-10.0 years, 13 males) with acute leukemia were studied.

GPBB became elevated (above 7.30 ?g/L) in 5 (26.3%) patients after PR, remained elevated in 5 (26.3%) after HCT and in 1 (5.3%) 14 days after HCT. Other markers remained within the reference range in all patients.

Our findings suggest that GPBB released from cardiomyocytes after myeloablative PR followed by HCT could be a new marker of acute subclinical cardiotoxicity. The predictive value for development of cardiomyopathy is unclear and further studies will be needed in this context.