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Browsing by Author "Schulz-Menger, Jeanette (6701382131)"

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    Publication
    Criteria for surveys: From the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging Scientific Initiatives Committee
    (2019)
    Haugaa, Kristina H. (24733615600)
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    Marsan, Nina Ajmone (23035780700)
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    Cameli, Matteo (36906722500)
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    D'Andrea, Antonello (55612687400)
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    Dweck, Marc R. (12783691400)
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    Carvalho, Ricardo Fontes (57210811139)
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    Holte, Espen (23024605700)
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    Manka, Robert (8839069800)
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    Michalski, Blazej (14527627100)
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    Podlesnikar, Tomaz (57188636569)
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    Popescu, Bogdan A. (37005664700)
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    Schulz-Menger, Jeanette (6701382131)
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    Sitges, Marta (7006509888)
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    Stankovic, Ivan (57197589922)
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    Maurer, Gerald (55606327600)
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    Edvardsen, Thor (6603263370)
    The European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) is committed to maintaining the highest standards of professional excellence in all aspects of cardiovascular imaging. The mission of the EACVI is to promote excellence in clinical diagnosis, research, technical development, and education in cardiovascular imaging with a particular focus on education, training, scientific initiatives, and research. The EACVI established the Scientific Initiatives Committee (SIC) in December 2018. This committee has responsibility for surveys among imagers, patients' surveys and surveys including data from clinical practice. The current document describes the aims of the EACVI SIC and the creation of the international EACVI survey network. This document summarizes the EACVI's standards for the survey questions and standards for writing the papers with the results of the surveys. These are in accordance with previous recommendations and were approved by the EACVI SIC and the EACVI Board in 2019. © 2019 Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
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    EACVI survey on hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
    (2022)
    Podlesnikar, Tomaz (57188636569)
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    Cardim, Nuno (7004229183)
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    Ajmone Marsan, Nina (23035780700)
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    D'Andrea, Antonello (55612687400)
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    Cameli, Matteo (36906722500)
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    Popescu, Bogdan A (37005664700)
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    Schulz-Menger, Jeanette (6701382131)
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    Stankovic, Ivan (57197589922)
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    Toplisek, Janez (56085208200)
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    Maurer, Gerald (55606327600)
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    Haugaa, Kristina H (24733615600)
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    Dweck, Marc R (12783691400)
    Aims: The European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) Scientific Initiatives Committee performed a global survey to evaluate current practice for the assessment and management of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Methods and results: A total of 213 centres from 38 different countries (87% European) responded to the survey. One hundred twenty-one (57%) centres followed HCM patients in a general cardiology outpatient clinic and 85 (40%) centres in a specialized HCM/cardiomyopathy clinic. While echocardiography was the primary imaging modality, cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) has become an important complementary tool. Cardiac anatomy, left ventricular (LV) systolic, and diastolic function were assessed according to current European guidelines and recommendations. To evaluate LV obstruction, 49% of the centres performed bedside provocation manoeuvres in every patient and 55% of the centres used exercise stress echocardiography. The majority of centres used the 5-year risk assessment of sudden cardiac death (SCD) calculated with the HCM Risk-SCD score. However, 34% of the centres also used extensive non-infarct late gadolinium enhancement on CMR and 27% the presence of LV apical aneurysm to help select patients for primary prevention implantable cardioverter-defibrillator therapy. Ninety-nine percent of the responding centres performed regular imaging follow-up of HCM patients. Conclusion: Most centres followed European guidelines and recommendations for the diagnosis and management of patients with HCM. The importance of bedside provocation manoeuvres and exercise stress echocardiography to diagnose LV outflow obstruction requires emphasis. Additional risk markers for SCD are used in many centres and might indicate the need for an update of current European recommendations. © 2021 Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
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    EACVI survey on the evaluation of left ventricular diastolic function
    (2021)
    Sitges, Marta (7006509888)
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    Ajmone Marsan, Nina (23035780700)
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    Cameli, Matteo (36906722500)
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    D'Andrea, Antonello (55612687400)
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    Carvalho, Ricardo Fontes (57210811139)
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    Holte, Espen (23024605700)
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    Michalski, Blazej (14527627100)
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    Podlesnikar, Tomaz (57188636569)
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    Popescu, Bogdan A (37005664700)
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    Schulz-Menger, Jeanette (6701382131)
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    Stankovic, Ivan (57197589922)
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    Haugaa, Kristina H (24733615600)
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    Dweck, Marc R (12783691400)
    Aims: The aim of this study is to analyse how current recommendations on left ventricular (LV) diastolic function assessment have been adopted. Identifying potential discrepancies between recommendations and everyday clinical practice would enable us to better understand and address the remaining challenges in this controversial and complex field. Methods and results: A total of 93 centres, mainly from tertiary care settings, responded to the survey. More than three-quarters (77%) of centres follow the 2016 ASE/EACVI recommendations for LV diastolic function evaluation in patients with preserved ejection fraction based upon e′, E/e′, tricuspid regurgitation velocity, and left atrial (LA) volume. These recommendations were generally preferred to the previous 2009 version. Many centres also consider strain assessments in the LV (48%) and left atrium (53%) as well as diastolic stress echocardiography (33%) to be useful as additional assessments of LV diastolic function. Echocardiographic assessments of LV diastolic function were used frequently to guide therapy in 72% of centres. Conclusion: There is widespread adoption of current recommendation on the evaluation of LV diastolic function and these are frequently used to guide patient management. Many centres now also consider LV and LA strain assessments useful in the clinical assessment of diastolic function. These may be considered in future recommendations. © 2021 The Author(s).
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    Proposed diagnostic criteria for arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy: European Task Force consensus report
    (2024)
    Corrado, Domenico (7004549983)
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    Anastasakis, Aris (57211065509)
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    Basso, Cristina (7004539938)
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    Bauce, Barbara (6602669781)
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    Blomström-Lundqvist, Carina (55941853900)
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    Bucciarelli-Ducci, Chiara (18534251300)
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    Cipriani, Alberto (56677447300)
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    De Asmundis, Carlo (24334785700)
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    Gandjbakhch, Estelle (15065438000)
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    Jiménez-Jáimez, Juan (7801478670)
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    Kharlap, Maria (13608637400)
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    McKenna, William J (56672467900)
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    Monserrat, Lorenzo (6701492113)
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    Moon, James (57202314649)
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    Pantazis, Antonis (6508359030)
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    Pelliccia, Antonio (7006756673)
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    Perazzolo Marra, Martina (9235712600)
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    Pillichou, Kalliopi (58701580300)
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    Schulz-Menger, Jeanette (6701382131)
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    Jurcut, Ruxandra (25228919600)
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    Seferovic, Petar (55873742100)
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    Sharma, Sanjay (7405877896)
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    Tfelt-Hansen, Jacob (6602844186)
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    Thiene, Gaetano (36045370500)
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    Wichter, Thomas (7005787061)
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    Wilde, Arthur (57224960950)
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    Zorzi, Alessandro (36139968100)
    Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM) is a heart muscle disease characterized by prominent “non-ischemic” myocardial scarring predisposing to ventricular electrical instability. Diagnostic criteria for the original phenotype, arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC), were first proposed in 1994 and revised in 2010 by an international Task Force (TF). A 2019 International Expert report appraised these previous criteria, finding good accuracy for diagnosis of ARVC but a lack of sensitivity for identification of the expanding phenotypic disease spectrum, which includes left-sided variants, i.e., biventricular (ABVC) and arrhythmogenic left ventricular cardiomyopathy (ALVC). The ARVC phenotype together with these left-sided variants are now more appropriately named ACM. The lack of diagnostic criteria for the left ventricular (LV) phenotype has resulted in clinical under-recognition of ACM patients over the 4 decades since the disease discovery. In 2020, the “Padua criteria” were proposed for both right- and left-sided ACM phenotypes. The presently proposed criteria represent a refinement of the 2020 Padua criteria and have been developed by an expert European TF to improve the diagnosis of ACM with upgraded and internationally recognized criteria. The growing recognition of the diagnostic role of CMR has led to the incorporation of myocardial tissue characterization findings for detection of myocardial scar using the late‑gadolinium enhancement (LGE) technique to more fully characterize right, biventricular and left disease variants, whether genetic or acquired (phenocopies), and to exclude other “non-scarring” myocardial disease. The “ring-like’ pattern of myocardial LGE/scar is now a recognized diagnostic hallmark of ALVC. Additional diagnostic criteria regarding LV depolarization and repolarization ECG abnormalities and ventricular arrhythmias of LV origin are also provided. These proposed upgrading of diagnostic criteria represents a working framework to improve management of ACM patients. © 2023 The Author(s)
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    Role of cardiovascular imaging in cancer patients receiving cardiotoxic therapies: a position statement on behalf of the Heart Failure Association (HFA), the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) and the Cardio-Oncology Council of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC)
    (2020)
    Čelutkienė, Jelena (6507133552)
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    Pudil, Radek (57210201747)
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    López-Fernández, Teresa (6507691686)
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    Grapsa, Julia (57204441798)
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    Nihoyannopoulos, Petros (55959198800)
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    Bergler-Klein, Jutta (56019537300)
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    Cohen-Solal, Alain (57189610711)
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    Farmakis, Dimitrios (55296706200)
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    Tocchetti, Carlo Gabriele (6507913481)
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    von Haehling, Stephan (6602981479)
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    Barberis, Vassilis (55890808700)
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    Flachskampf, Frank A. (7006759790)
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    Čeponienė, Indrė (55889440900)
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    Haegler-Laube, Eva (57218535298)
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    Suter, Thomas (7006001704)
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    Lapinskas, Tomas (57203632017)
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    Prasad, Sanjay (7403003613)
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    de Boer, Rudolf A. (8572907800)
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    Wechalekar, Kshama (20736050000)
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    Anker, Markus S. (35763654100)
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    Iakobishvili, Zaza (6603020069)
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    Bucciarelli-Ducci, Chiara (18534251300)
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    Schulz-Menger, Jeanette (6701382131)
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    Cosyns, Bernard (57202595662)
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    Gaemperli, Oliver (11141900500)
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    Belenkov, Yury (7006528098)
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    Hulot, Jean-Sébastien (6603026259)
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    Galderisi, Maurizio (57203882101)
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    Lancellotti, Patrizio (7003380556)
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    Bax, Jeroen (55429494700)
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    Marwick, Thomas H. (7102424966)
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    Chioncel, Ovidiu (12769077100)
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    Jaarsma, Tiny (56962769200)
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    Mullens, Wilfried (55916359500)
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    Piepoli, Massimo (7005292730)
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    Thum, Thomas (57195743477)
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    Heymans, Stephane (6603326423)
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    Mueller, Christian (57638261900)
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    Moura, Brenda (6602544591)
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    Ruschitzka, Frank (7003359126)
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    Zamorano, Jose Luis (7101735283)
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    Rosano, Giuseppe (7007131876)
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    Coats, Andrew J.S. (35395386900)
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    Asteggiano, Riccardo (24761476900)
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    Seferovic, Petar (6603594879)
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    Edvardsen, Thor (6603263370)
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    Lyon, Alexander R. (57203046227)
    Cardiovascular (CV) imaging is an important tool in baseline risk assessment and detection of CV disease in oncology patients receiving cardiotoxic cancer therapies. This position statement examines the role of echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance, nuclear cardiac imaging and computed tomography in the management of cancer patients. The Imaging and Cardio-Oncology Study Groups of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) in collaboration with the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) and the Cardio-Oncology Council of the ESC have evaluated the current evidence for the value of modern CV imaging in the cardio-oncology field. The most relevant echocardiographic parameters, including global longitudinal strain and three-dimensional ejection fraction, are proposed. The protocol for baseline pre-treatment evaluation and specific surveillance algorithms or pathways for anthracycline chemotherapy, HER2-targeted therapies such as trastuzumab, vascular endothelial growth factor tyrosine kinase inhibitors, BCr-Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitors, proteasome inhibitors and immune checkpoint inhibitors are presented. The indications for CV imaging after completion of oncology treatment are considered. The typical consequences of radiation therapy and the possibility of their identification in the long term are also summarized. Special populations are discussed including female survivors planning pregnancy, patients with carcinoid disease, patients with cardiac tumours and patients with right heart failure. Future directions and ongoing CV imaging research in cardio-oncology are discussed. © 2020 European Society of Cardiology
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    The EACVI survey on cardiac imaging in cardio-oncology
    (2021)
    Stankovic, Ivan (57197589922)
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    Dweck, Marc R (12783691400)
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    Marsan, Nina Ajmone (23035780700)
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    Bergler-Klein, Jutta (56019537300)
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    Holte, Espen (23024605700)
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    Manka, Robert (8839069800)
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    Schulz-Menger, Jeanette (6701382131)
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    Sitges, Marta (7006509888)
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    Haugaa, Kristina H (24733615600)
    Early and late cardiovascular (CV) toxicities related to many cancer treatments may complicate the clinical course of patients, offsetting therapeutic benefits, and altering prognosis. The early detection, monitoring, and treatment of cardiotoxicity have therefore become essential parts of cancer patient care. CV imaging is a cornerstone of every cardio-oncology unit, but its use may vary across Europe because of the non-uniform availability of advanced imaging techniques and differences in the organization and logistics of cardio-oncology services. The purpose of this EACVI survey in cardio-oncology is to obtain real-world data on the current usage of cardiac imaging in cancer patients. Data from 104 centres and 35 different countries confirmed that cardiac imaging plays a pivotal role in the detection and monitoring of cardiac toxicity in oncology patients in Europe and beyond. However, it also revealed gaps between guidelines recommendations and everyday clinical practice, highlighting some of the challenges that need to be overcome in this rapidly advancing field. © 2020 Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.

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