About this Research Topic
The goal of this collection is to collect the most updated information about the diagnosis of cardiac tumors (with particular attention to the differential diagnosis between the benign and the malignant ones), recommended therapeutic approaches for cardiac sarcomas and other malignant cardiac tumors, and to suggest to the general community of cardiologists some guidelines to suspect and approach this rare and dreadful cardiac disease.
Specific themes we would like contributors to address include, but are not limited to:
• Epidemiology, clinical presentation. (Review of the literature)
• Pathology: sarcomas and diagnostic challenges, lymphomas, other rare tumors involving the heart. Role of pathology in driving therapies. (case series, review of the literature)
• Echocardiography: when suspect a malignant cardiac tumor, the role of transesophageal, 3-dimensional and contrast echocardiography (case series and review of the literature)
• Use of different imaging techniques (radiology, nuclear medicine) in the differential diagnosis, staging, planning of therapies and follow-up (case series and review of the literature)
• Surgery: challenges in the surgical approach and results (case series, review of the literature)
• Chemotherapy: old and new drugs. (Review)
• Radiotherapy: use of different techniques to overcome the problems of a moving target(case series, review of the literature)
• How to plan a multimodality therapy (case series, review of the literature)
• How to plan a follow-up: times, methods (review, personal experience)
• How to build a cardio-oncology team for cardiac tumors
Keywords: primary and secondary cardiac tumors, cardiac sarcomas, cardiac surgery, cardiac lymphoma, chemotherapy, cardiac tumors radiotherapy, multimodal therapy of cardiac tumors
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.