Copenhagen, Denmark
Onsite/Online

ESTRO 2022

Session Item

Other
Poster (digital)
Interdisciplinary
Interim analysis of a prospective ventricular tachycardia radioablation safety trial (NCT04642963)
Marcin Miszczyk, Poland
PO-1057

Abstract

Interim analysis of a prospective ventricular tachycardia radioablation safety trial (NCT04642963)
Authors:

Marcin Miszczyk1, Mateusz Sajdok2, Tomasz Jadczyk3,4, Radosław Kurzelowski3, Tomasz Latusek5, Krzysztof Gołba2,6, Jacek Bednarek6,7, Łukasz Dolla8, Aleksandra Grządziel8, Kamil Zub2, Bartłomiej Tomasik9,10, Magdalena Cybulska2,6, Rafał Gardas6,2, Anna Drzewiecka2, Wojciech Wojakowski3, Krystian Wita11, Sławomir Blamek5

1Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology, IIIrd Department of Radiotherapy and Chemotherapy, Gliwice, Poland; 2Upper-Silesian Heart Center, Medical University of Silesia, Department of Electrocardiology, Katowice, Poland; 3Medical University of Silesia, Department of Cardiology and Structural Heart Diseases, Katowice, Poland; 4St. Anne’s University Hospital Brno, International Clinical Research Center, Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology Group, Brno, Poland; 5Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology, Radiotherapy Department, Gliwice, Poland; 6Medical University of Silesia, Department of Electrocardiology and Heart Failure, Katowice, Poland; 7John Paul II Hospital, Department of Electrocardiology, Kraków, Poland; 8Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology, Radiotherapy Planning Department, Gliwice, Poland; 9Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology, Department of Radiotherapy, Gliwice, Poland; 10Medical University of Gdańsk, Department of Oncology and Radiotherapy, Gdańsk, Poland; 11Medical University of Silesia, First Department of Cardiology, Katowice, Poland

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Purpose or Objective

The SMART-VT trial aims to assess the safety of electrophysiology-guided non-invasive radioablation (STAR) for ventricular tachycardia (VT) in patients with structural heart disease and recurrent, clinically significant VT, despite adequate pharmacotherapy, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD), and prior catheter ablations.

We present the pre-planned interim safety analysis results, including the first seven patients out of the planned 11-patients group and a report on the initial assessment of treatment efficacy.

Material and Methods

Seven patients were treated between 12.2020 and 06.2021 with a total dose of 25 Gy in a single fraction which was prescribed to the arrhythmia substrate (Fig. 1). The target volume was defined using invasive electroanatomic mapping and contrast-enhanced cardiac-gated CT. The gross target volume was adjusted for the cardiac movement based on cardiac-gated CT and expanded by a 3-millimeter uniform planning target volume margin. The treatment was performed on Varian EDGETM linear accelerator using Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy and Deep-Inspiration Breath Hold technique.

The primary endpoint of the study was defined as a 3-month observation without severe (grade ≥3) adverse events (AE) in at least 6 out of 7 patients (1st stage), and in total in at least 9 out of 11 patients (2nd stage). Severity of symptoms was assessed according to CTCAE v5.0. The secondary endpoints included reduction of VT burden and ICD treatments, based on the ICD interrogations.

Figure 1. Dose distribution


Results

The results of the interim analysis demonstrated that the primary endpoint of the first phase of the study has been met. Within the 3-months follow-up period after the treatment, we observed one episode of severe AE potentially associated with treatment. Patient #2 developed clinical grade 3 heart failure exacerbation at 3 months after the treatment, which led to an unplanned hospitalization. The patient remained hospitalized for 11 days, receiving inotropic agents, and right pleural thoracocentesis. The AE subsided with no permanent sequelae.

The summary of treatment efficacy is presented in Table 1. Patients #2 and #5 experienced a transient increase in VT burden shortly after STAR. The majority of the patients experienced a significant reduction of VT burden and ICD treatments after the blanking period.

Table 1. Treatment efficacy


Conclusion

Based on the results of the interim analysis, STAR appears to be a safe treatment method with clinically relevant efficacy and the results of the safety analysis justify continuation of enrollment.