Don't think it will be a problem as such. Capacitance issues crop up on interconnects especially on the differences between analog and digital and the different requirements of each.
This lifted from the BlueJeansCable site:
"Speaker cable is a bit different from a lot of the interconnect cables we handle, in several respects. Because speakers are driven at low impedance (typically 4 or 8 ohms) and high current, speaker cables are, for all practical purposes, immune from interference from EMI or RFI, so shielding isn't required. The low impedance of the circuit also tips the balance of concern from capacitance, which is important in interconnect use, to inductance, which, while a concern, can be controlled only to a limited degree. The biggest issue in speaker cables, from the point of view of sound quality, is simply conductivity; the lower the resistance of the cable, the lower the contribution of the speaker cable's resistance to the damping factor, and the flatter the frequency response will be. While one can spend thousands of dollars on exotic speaker cable, in the end analysis, it's the sheer conductivity of the cable, and (barring a really odd design, which may introduce various undesirable effects) little else that matters. The answer to keeping conductivity high is simple: the larger the wire, the lower the resistance, and the higher the conductivity."
What are your interconnects? That's where the real magic and damage happens as far as I'm concerned. I picked up two pair of the Silver Interconnects from HomeGrownAudio and couldn't be happier. The 10-gauge stock cable from Blue Jeans serves very well.