Six researchers standing in a row in a medical laboratory for a team photo
From left: Borja Ibáñez, Laura Cádiz, Agustín Clemente Moragón, Ángela Pollán, Lucía López Palomar, and Anabel Díaz Guerra

Image source: CNIC 

News • Conditioning against cardiotoxicity

Chemotherapy: protecting the heart without compromising anticancer efficacy

Advances in cancer treatment mean that more people than ever are surviving the disease. However, some of the most effective anticancer drugs—a class of medicines called anthracyclines—can cause serious damage to the heart. In some patients, this cardiac damage appears months or even years after treatment and has a major impact on quality of life.

Protecting the heart without compromising the effectiveness of chemotherapy is a major challenge in the field of cardio-oncology. Now, a team at the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC), led by Dr. Borja Ibáñez, provides new evidence that this can be achieved. 

The study, published in Basic Research in Cardiology, demonstrates in an experimental model that the heart can be protected during anthracycline treatment using a simple, non-pharmacological technique known as remote ischemic conditioning (RIC), without reducing chemotherapy’s antitumor effectiveness. 

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RIC consists of controlled, brief interruptions of blood flow to a limb, usually achieved by applying a pressure cuff similar to those used to measure blood pressure. This stimulus activates protective mechanisms in the body that help the heart better withstand subsequent stressors, such as the damage caused by certain cancer treatments. 

Showing that the heart can be protected without compromising cancer treatment is essential to developing safer therapies

Anabel Díaz Guerra

In the study, the researchers used anthracycline-treated, tumor-bearing mice to model the clinical situation in cancer patients. The results show that animals receiving RIC maintained better cardiac function during treatment. Importantly, this cardioprotective effect was not associated with increased tumor growth or reduced antitumor efficacy of chemotherapy. 

The study’s first author, Anabel Díaz Guerra, a CNIC predoctoral researcher funded by the Spanish Association Against Cancer (AECC), explains: “Showing that the heart can be protected without compromising cancer treatment is essential to developing safer therapies.” These results align with the translational vision of the group led by Dr. Borja Ibáñez—CNIC Scientific Director, cardiologist at Fundación Jiménez Díaz, and principal investigator in the CIBERCV network—which is currently coordinating the European clinical trial RESILIENCE. The trial is evaluating whether RIC can protect the hearts of cancer patients treated with anthracyclines and reduce long-term cardiovascular complications. 

Senior CNIC investigator Dr. Laura Cádiz, co-supervisor of Díaz Guerra’s thesis, notes that the findings “reinforce the idea that simple, non-invasive strategies can play a key role in cardiovascular protection for cancer patients and open new avenues to improve their quality of life during and after treatment.” 

Through its Myocardial Homeostasis and Cardiac Damage Programme, Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC) investigates the cardiovascular toxicity of cancer treatments, particularly the damage caused by anthracyclines, with the aim of developing effective and safe therapies. 

Dr. Ibáñez’s group leads major European projects such as the ERC Consolidator Grant “MATRIX” and the Horizon 2020–HEALTH project “RESILIENCE,” in collaboration with Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz and CIBERCV, to reduce the incidence of heart failure among cancer survivors.


Source: Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares Carlos III 

10.03.2026

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