Cedars Sinai Medical Center

06/22/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/22/2026 07:01

The Heart of a Cancer Patient

It was a fall day in 2024 and Ken Aster was hiking in Catalina, California, with his wife, Melissa Orr. They hiked together often but 64-year-old Aster-also an avid cyclist, surfer and pickleball player-was shocked to find he couldn't keep up.

His labored breathing and exhaustion prompted him to see his physician, who ordered a battery of tests. Aster's diagnosis: A rare cancer called a neuroendocrine tumor was causing a condition called carcinoid heart disease, and causing his heart to fail.

With treatment at the Cedars-Sinai Neuroendocrine Tumor Multidisciplinary Clinic, Aster is now back on the trail, his bike, his board and the court.

"I went from wondering how long I have to live to understanding that this can be managed," Aster said. "I feel better than I have felt in years."

Aster's symptoms came on slowly over several months: crushing fatigue, bloating, loss of appetite and swelling in his legs and feet. Blood tests ordered by his primary doctor were normal, but a CT scan showed tumors in his liver, which were eventually diagnosed as stage 4 neuroendocrine cancer.

"We received the diagnosis the day we dropped the youngest of our four kids off at college," Orr said. "We had other plans, so we just had to reset."

Unable to sleep the night they got the news, Orr-who Aster said was his caregiver and support throughout this difficult time and credits with helping save his life-spent hours online. She clicked her way to the Neuroendocrine Tumor Research Foundation. The organization, a resource for research funding, patient education and support, directed the couple to the Neuroendocrine Cancer Foundation, which referred them to Cedars-Sinai and its multidisciplinary clinic.

"We were concerned about Ken's neuroendocrine tumors, which had spread to his liver and were making it difficult for his stomach to work normally," said Andrew Hendifar, MD, who leads the clinic and is a professor of Medicine at Cedars-Sinai. "But we knew from experience that his heart failure would have to be treated first. We didn't have a minute to lose."

Neuroendocrine tumors begin in neuroendocrine cells, which connect the nervous system with the hormone-producing endocrine system. They can occur anywhere in the body.

Aster's began in his small bowel and produced a hormone called serotonin, which thickened two of his heart valves and caused them to leak. The condition is called carcinoid heart disease.

Prashanth Venkatesh, MD, assistant professor of Cardiology in the Smidt Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinai, is the cardiologist on the neuroendocrine team.

"The pulmonary valve, which sends blood from the heart to the lungs, is notoriously difficult to evaluate with standard imaging techniques because of its location in the chest and the relative rarity of pulmonary valve disease in adults," Venkatesh said. "Significant pulmonary valve involvement in carcinoid heart disease is hence very easily missed."

Venkatesh, a congenital heart specialist, often employs more extensive imaging techniques for patients born with structural heart defects. Aster's results showed there was a leak in his pulmonary valve as well as a leak in his tricuspid valve. Both valves needed to be replaced.

"When there is a leaky valve, which we call regurgitation, some of the blood in the heart goes in the wrong direction," said Raj Makkar, MD, vice president of Cardiovascular Innovation and Intervention at Cedars-Sinai and the Karsh Distinguished Chair in Interventional Cardiology in the Smidt Heart Institute. "With leaky pulmonary and tricuspid valves, the blood that is supposed to go into the lungs can leak back toward the upper chamber of the heart."

Aster's pulmonary valve was replaced via a minimally invasive procedure in which a catheter was threaded up through an artery in the groin to maneuver the valve into its proper place. Four weeks later, Makkar replaced Aster's tricuspid valve using a similar procedure.

"Patients with carcinoid heart disease are going through a lot because of the neuroendocrine tumor, and traditional valve replacement surgery puts them at higher risk for complications," Makkar said. "We pioneered testing of transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement around five years ago, and this was the option we chose for Mr. Aster."

To address the neuroendocrine tumors on Aster's liver, Alexandra Gangi, MD, director of the Division of Surgical Oncology and co-director of the Neuroendocrine Tumor Multidisciplinary Clinc, chose another minimally invasive approach: tumor embolization.

"We accessed the tumors with a catheter, through the artery in the groin," Gangi said. "This allows us to block off the blood flow to the specific arteries that feed the tumors. This starves the tumors, and results in shrinking and tumor control."

So far, Aster has avoided surgery and chemotherapy because of the nature of neuroendocrine tumors and the expertise of his care team in sequencing his therapies based on his sypmtoms.

"I think the difference between metastatic neuroendocrine tumors and most other types of gastrointestinal cancers is that we're playing the long game," Gangi said. "We often do the least invasive thing and save more aggressive options for when we really need them. These tumors tend to recur, but prognosis is generally good and patients can live a long time with them."

Additional treatment or surgical procedures might be on the horizon, but today, Aster is doing well.

"We feel very fortunate that we were able to identify this as early as we did and intervene in the way that we did," Hendifar said. "A few years ago, even six months ago, Ken wouldn't have been a candidate for minimally invasive valve replacements. He would have required open-heart surgery, and I'm not sure if the outcome would have been as good."

Aster describes his current health as "great."

"I just started cycling again in January, 13 months after the second valve replacement," Aster said. "Now I'm doing a 25-mile ride in the hills two or three times a week with no problem. My heart feels as normal as can be."

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Cedars Sinai Medical Center published this content on June 22, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on June 22, 2026 at 13:01 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]