Patient selection, ventricular tachycardia substrate delineation, and data transfer for stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation: a clinical consensus statement of the European Heart Rhythm Association of the European Society of Cardiology and the Heart Rhythm Society
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation (STAR) is a novel, non-invasive, and promising treatment option for ventricular arrhythmias (VAs). It has been applied in highly selected patients mainly as bailout procedure, when (multiple) catheter ablations, together with anti-arrhythmic drugs, were unable to control the VAs. Despite the increasing clinical use, there is still limited knowledge of the acute and long-term response of normal and diseased myocardium to STAR. Acute toxicity appeared to be reasonably low, but potential late adverse effects may be underreported. Among published studies, the provided methodological information is often limited, and patient selection, target volume definition, methods for determination and transfer of target volume, and techniques for treatment planning and execution differ across studies, hampering the pooling of data and comparison across studies. In addition, STAR requires close and new collaboration between clinical electrophysiologists and radiation oncologists, which is facilitated by shared knowledge in each collaborator's area of expertise and a common language. This clinical consensus statement provides uniform definition of cardiac target volumes. It aims to provide advice in patient selection for STAR including aetiology-specific aspects and advice in optimal cardiac target volume identification based on available evidence. Safety concerns and the advice for acute and long-term monitoring including the importance of standardized reporting and follow-up are covered by this document. Areas of uncertainty are listed, which require high-quality, reliable pre-clinical and clinical evidence before the expansion of STAR beyond clinical scenarios in which proven therapies are ineffective or unavailable.
Contributors

Robert Rademaker
Author

Amin Al-Ahmad
Author

Corrado Carbucicchio
Author

Jakub Cvek
Author

Micaela Ebert
Author

Pier Lambiase
Author

Satish Misra
Author

Luis Schiappacasse
Author

Marek Sramko
Author

William G Stevenson
Author
Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville , United States of America

Paul C Zei
Author

Dan Wichterle
Author

Jonathan Chrispin
Author

Claudia Herrera Siklody
Author

Radek Neuwirth
Author

Gemma Pelargonio
Author

Tobias Reichlin
Author

Clifford Robinson
Author

Claudio Tondo
Author
You may be interested in








