“i think it is an interesting retrospective cohort study,” said girish l. kalra, a senior cardiology fellow at the david geffen school of medicine at ucla, who did not participate in the research. “the primary shortcoming of the study is that the database did not allow investigators to control for the single greatest risk for developing cancer and heart disease: smoking. cigarette smoking may be the common thread in this study.”
while the absence of data on smoking habits may account for an increase in oropharyngeal and respiratory cancers, the increased risk was evident across a spectrum of different cancers. beyond smoking, there are other factors that can account for the link between heart failure and cancer, researchers said, including previous research that concluded a protein biomarker of heart disease correlates to a heightened cancer risk. they also speculated that chronic inflammation may at play in both cancer and heart failure cases.
“there are more correlations between heart failure and cancer than just common risk factors,” said mark luedde, senior author of the study and a cardiologist at the university of kiel in germany. “heart failure is not a disease of the heart. it is almost always a disease of the heart and other organs. the importance of co-morbidities for the prognosis and quality of life of those affected cannot be overestimated.”