| Literature DB >> 33802802 |
Marcin Miszczyk1, Tomasz Jadczyk2,3, Krzysztof Gołba4,5, Wojciech Wojakowski2, Krystian Wita6, Jacek Bednarek7, Sławomir Blamek8.
Abstract
The electrophysiology-guided noninvasive cardiac radioablation, also known as STAR (stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation) is an emerging treatment method for persistent ventricular tachycardia. Since its first application in 2012 in Stanford Cancer Institute, and a year later in University Hospital Ostrava, Czech Republic, the authors from all around the world have published case reports and case series, and several prospective trials were established. In this article, we would like to discuss the available clinical evidence, analyze the potentially clinically relevant differences in methodology, and address some of the unique challenges that come with this treatment method.Entities:
Keywords: ablation; noninvasive; radiosurgery; stereotactic body radiation therapy; substrate ablation; ventricular tachycardia
Year: 2021 PMID: 33802802 PMCID: PMC8002399 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10061238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Procedural workflow. CT–computed tomography.
Figure 2Literature research workflow.
Clinical data on stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation (STAR).
| Date | 1st Author; Type | #, Irradiation Method | Median Age | Etiology; Mean LVEF (%) | Median Follow-Up (Months) | Description of Treatment Outcome and Toxicity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| July 2014 | Cvek [ | 1; CK | 72 | Dilated cardiomyopathy; 25% | 4 |
No episode of malignant arrhythmia for 4 months |
|
No signs of toxicity | ||||||
| June 2015 | Loo [ | 1; CK | 71 | Ischemic; 24% | 9 |
Frequent nonsustained and pace-terminated VT occurred 3 months post-STAR after reducing the dose of sotalol and mexiletine |
|
Recurrent VT and COPD exacerbation at 9 months after STAR followed by death | ||||||
| December 2017 | Cuculich [ | 5; C-arm | 62 | Mostly non-ischemic (60%); 23% | 12 |
VT episodes decreased by 99.9% after a 6 week blanking period in all patients |
|
No clinically significant STAR-related adverse effects. One patient died of a stroke at 3 weeks after treatment, unclear association with STAR | ||||||
| November 2018 | Robinson [ | 19; C-arm | 66 | Mostly ischemic (58%); 25% ^ | 13 |
50% and 95% reduction in VT episodes or 24 h PVC burden in 94% and 61% of the patients, respectively |
|
Two grade III treatment-related SAE (heart failure exacerbation, pericarditis), no grade 4 toxicity | ||||||
| December 2018 | Neuwirth [ | 10; CK | 64 | Mostly ischemic (80%); 26.5% | 28 |
VT burden decreased by 87.5% over 28 months |
|
Mild toxicity, one case of possibly related grade III toxicity within follow-up period—gradually progressing mitral regurgitation | ||||||
| September 2019 | Lloyd [ | 10; C-arm | 61 | Mostly nonischemic (60%); N/A | 6 * |
69% reduction of VT burden in evaluable patients (8/10) within 176 day, 94% reduction after excluding the single non-responder (7/10) |
|
Two patients with mild clinical and radiographic signs of pneumonitis responsive to steroid therapy, one patient resuscitated due to VT during STAR treatment | ||||||
| March 2020 | Gianni [ | 5; CK | 61 | Mostly ischemic (80%); 34% | 12 * |
Clinically significant VT recurrence in all patients |
|
No STAR-related acute or early radiation complications, however, two of the patients died of heart failure exacerbation at 10 and 12 months | ||||||
| August 2020 | Chin [ | 8; C-arm | 74 | Ischemic/nonischemic (even); 21% | 7.8 |
No statistically significant difference between the total number of ICD therapies (VT episodes, ATP/ICD shocks) recorded 3-month pre- and post-STAR. “Apparent clinical benefit” was observed in 33% of the patients. |
|
No acute periprocedural complications. Two non-STAR-related deaths at 2 months, one unclear (multiple ICD shock till 6th week, opted out of ICD therapy). |
#—number of cases; LVEF—left ventricle ejection fraction; ATP—antitachycardia pacing; ICD—implantable cardioverter–defibrillator; STAR—stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation; VT—ventricular tachycardia; CK—CyberKnife. ^—median *—mean.
Case reports.
| Date | 1st Author | Age; VT Type | Etiology | Follow-Up | Irradiation Method | Description of Treatment Outcome and Toxicity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 2018 | Jumeau [ | 75; Incessant VT (polymorphic) | Severe dilated cardiomyopathy | 4 months | CK | Free from VT up to 4th month after STAR |
| October 2018 | Haskova [ | 34; Recurrent VT (monomorphic) | Cardiac fibroma | 8 months | CK | VT gradually subsided within 8 months after STAR |
| March 2019 | Scholz [ | 53; Ventricular fibrillation | Ischemic | 60 days | C-arm | Cessation of arrhythmic episodes in 2 weeks and no recurrence within 60 days |
| June 2019 | Zeng [ | 29; Recurrent VT (two morphologies) | Cardiac Lymphoma | 4 months | CK | Free from VT up to 4th month after STAR |
| July 2019 | Marti-Almor [ | 64; Incessant VT (monomorphic) | Right ventricular cardiomyopathy | 4 months | C-arm | Free from VT up to 4th month after STAR |
| September 2019 | Bhaskaran [ | 34; VT storm | Unknown | 60 days | C-arm | Cessation of arrhythmic episodes in 6 days and no recurrence within 60 days |
| Octobr 2019 | Krug [ | 78; Recurrent VT (monomorphic) | Dilated cardiomyopathy | 57 days | C-arm | Partial VT burden reduction. The patient developed sepsis-associated cardiac circulatory failure which led to death 57 days after treatment |
| February 2020 | Mayinger [ | 71; Recurrent VT (polymorphic) | Nonischemic | 3 months | MR-linac | Immediate aggravation of the clinical VT (48 h) followed by cessation of VT for the rest of the FU |
| July 2020 | Park [ | 76; Recurrent VT (monomorphic) | apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy | 6 months | C-arm | Despite two occurrences of sustained VT at 6 and 8 weeks, patient remained free from ICD shocks up to 6th month after STAR. |
ATP—antitachycardia pacing; ICD—implantable cardioverter–defibrillator; STAR—stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation; VT—ventricular tachycardia; CK—CyberKnife.
Ongoing clinical trials.
| Date of Start | Full Name of the Trial | Country of Origin | Clinical Trial Identifier | Status | Planned Number of Participants |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 2015 | CyberHeart’s Cardiac Arrhythmia Ablation Treatment: Patients with Refractory Ventricular Tachycardia | USA | NCT02661048 | Active, not recruiting | 5 |
| Primary objectives completed | |||||
| Results published | |||||
| July 2016 | Phase I/II Study of EP-guided Noninvasive Cardiac Radioablation for Treatment of Ventricular Tachycardia | USA | NCT02919618 | Active, not recruiting | 19 |
| Primary objectives completed | |||||
| Results published | |||||
| August 2018 | Phase I/II Study of 4-D Navigated NonInvasive Radiosurgical Ablation of Ventricular Tachycardia | Czech Republic | NCT03601832 | Active, recruiting | 10 |
| August 2018 | STereotactic Ablative Radiosurgery of Recurrent Ventricular Tachycardia in Structural Heart Disease | Czech Republic | NCT03819504 | Withdrawn | 50 |
| September 2019 | STereotactic RadioAblation by Multimodal Imaging for VT | Italy | NCT04066517 | Active, recruiting | 15 |
| September 2019 | Minimally Invasive Arrhythmia Treatment with External Radiation Therapy for Intractable Ventricular Tachycardia | Japan | jRCTs032190041 | Active, recruiting | 3 |
| December 2019 | Radiosurgery for the Treatment of Refractory Ventricular Extrasystoles and Tachycardias | Germany | NCT03867747 | Active, recruiting | 20 |
| January 2020 | Stereotactic Arrhythmia Radioablation for Ventricular Tachycardia Management | Canada | NCT04065802 | Active, recruiting | 20 |
| August 2020 | Cohort Study—SBRT for VT Radioablation | Canada | NCT04162171 | Not yet recruiting | 12 |
| October 2020 | STereotactic Ablative Radiosurgery of Recurrent Ventricular Tachycardia in Structural Heart Disease | Czech Republic | NCT04612140 | Active, recruiting | 100 |
| September 2020 | Stereotactic Management of Arrhythmia—Radiosurgery in Treatment of Ventricular Tachycardia | Poland | NCT04642963 | Active, recruiting | 11 |
Figure 3Pre-treatment cone beam CT (upper-left and lower-right parts) fused with treatment planning CTs. High-density reference points facilitate precise image-guided radiotherapy, despite significant artifacts caused by the Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator lead.