
Angela R. Bradbury
· MDVerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1990–2024
Research topics
- Internal medicine
- Medicine
- Cardiology
- Oncology
Selected publications
Journal of the American Heart Association · 2020 · 160 citations
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Cardiology
Background We examined the longitudinal associations between changes in cardiovascular biomarkers and cancer therapy-related cardiac dysfunction (CTRCD) in patients with breast cancer treated with cardotoxic cancer therapy. Methods and Results Repeated measures of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT), NT-proBNP (N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide), myeloperoxidase, placental growth factor, and growth differentiation factor 15 were assessed longitudinally in a prospective cohort of 323 patients treated with anthracyclines and/or trastuzumab followed over a maximum of 3.7 years with serial echocardiograms. CTRCD was defined as a ≥10% decline in left ventricular ejection fraction to a value <50%. Associations between changes in biomarkers and left ventricular ejection fraction were evaluated in repeated-measures linear regression models. Cox regression models assessed the associations between biomarkers and CTRCD. Early increases in all biomarkers occurred with anthracycline-based regimens. hs-cTnT levels >14 ng/L at anthracycline completion were associated with a 2-fold increased CTRCD risk (hazard ratio, 2.01; 95% CI, 1.00-4.06). There was a modest association between changes in NT-proBNP and left ventricular ejection fraction in the overall cohort; this was most pronounced with sequential anthracycline and trastuzumab (1.1% left ventricular ejection fraction decline [95% CI, -1.8 to -0.4] with each NT-proBNP doubling). Increases in NT-proBNP were also associated with CTRCD (hazard ratio per doubling, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.32-1.84). Increases in myeloperoxidase were associated with CTRCD in patients who received sequential anthracycline and trastuzumab (hazard ratio per doubling, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.04-1.58). Conclusions Cardiovascular biomarkers may play an important role in CTRCD risk prediction in patients with breast cancer who receive cardiotoxic cancer therapy, particularly in those treated with sequential anthracycline and trastuzumab therapy. Clinical Trial Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/. Unique identifier: NCT01173341.
Recent grants
NIH · $6.7M · 2014–2026
NIH · $2.5M · 2017
NIH · $400k · 2015
NIH · $3.3M · 2016
Frequent coauthors
- 150 shared
Susan M. Domchek
University of Pennsylvania
- 131 shared
Brian L. Egleston
Fox Chase Cancer Center
- 81 shared
Mary B. Daly
Fox Chase Cancer Center
- 80 shared
Linda Patrick‐Miller
University of Chicago
- 74 shared
Olufunmilayo I. Olopade
- 72 shared
Irene L. Andrulis
Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute
- 61 shared
Rebecca Spence
American Society of Clinical Oncology
- 56 shared
Julia A. Knight
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Angela R. Bradbury
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup