Int. J. of Cardiology and Lipidology Research https://cosmosscholars.com/phms/index.php/ijclr <strong>International Journal of Cardiology and Lipidology Research</strong> is a peer reviewed medical journal which strengthen the research and educational base of Cardiology and Lipidology. The journal provides an active platform for cardiologists, endocrinologists, lipidologist, and primary care physicians concerned with coronary health and related aspects of medical care from around the world. We publish original research articles, reviews, case studies, conference papers and short notes related to aforementioned field. Cosmos Schoalrs Publishing House en-US Int. J. of Cardiology and Lipidology Research 2410-2822 <h4>Policy for Journals/Articles with Open Access</h4>Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:<br /><ol type="a"><ol type="a"><li>Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/" target="_new">Creative Commons Attribution License</a> that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.</li></ol></ol><br /><ol type="a"><li>Authors are permitted and encouraged to post links to their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work</li></ol><h4>Policy for Journals / Manuscript with Paid Access</h4>Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:<br /><ol type="a"><ol type="a"><li>Publisher retain copyright .</li></ol></ol><br /><ol type="a"><li>Authors are permitted and encouraged to post links to their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work .</li></ol> Management of Patients with Malignancy before Heart Transplantation https://cosmosscholars.com/phms/index.php/ijclr/article/view/963 <p><em>Background:</em> Heart transplantation and malignancy connect in several ways. Cancer can be an incidental finding, cancer treatment can also be the cause of end-stage heart failure, for which heart transplantation is necessary or malignancy can occur after transplantation, because of immune suppression.</p> <p><em>Methods:</em> This is a database search on Web of Science from 2010 on, with the term “heart transplant* AND (cancer OR malignancy)”. This resulted in 3767 titles.</p> <p><em>Results:</em> Eight articles contained sufficient information about survival. In most series, a history of pre-transplant malignancy (PTM) did not affect survival, except for hematologic malignancy or short cancer-free pre-transplant interval. Other patient-related factors were usually more important. The effect of PTM on the rate of post-transplant malignancy followed a comparable pattern. In patients with chemotherapy-related cardiomyopathy, other causes than malignancy were more important.</p> <p><em>Conclusions</em><em>:</em> The outcome for heart transplantation in patients with PTM is acceptable in terms of survival, and occurrence post-transplant malignancy. An appropriate PTM-free interval of two to five years seems necessary. Hematologic PTM has a worse outcome. Although the limitations of this review warrant caution with the interpretation of its results, increased post-transplant screening for malignancy and of use of proliferation signal inhibitors, due to their antineoplastic activity, could be cornerstones of the management of these patients.</p> Wilhelm Mistiaen Copyright (c) 2020 2020-10-10 2020-10-10 6 2 1 7