Atrial arrhythmias following CAR-chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy: Incidence, risk factors and biomarker profile

Roni Shouval*, Adam Goldman, Jessica R. Flynn, Ahmed El-Moghraby, Mahin Rehman, Sean M. Devlin, Magdalena Corona, Ivan Landego, Richard J Lin, Michael Scordo, Sandeep S. Raj, Sergio A. Giralt, M.  Lia Palomba, Parastoo B. Dahi, Moneeza Walji, Gilles Salles, Karthik Nath, Mark B. Geyer, Jae H. Park, Joshua A. FeinIoanna Kosmidou, Gunjan L. Shah, Jennifer E. Liu, Miguel Angel Perales, Syed S. Mahmood*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recent reports have raised concerns about the association of chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) with non-negligible cardiotoxicity, particularly atrial arrhythmias. First, we conducted a pharmacovigilance study to assess the reporting of atrial arrhythmias following CD19-directed CAR-T. Subsequently, to determine the incidence, risk factors and outcomes of atrial arrhythmias post-CAR-T, we compiled a retrospective single-centre cohort of non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients. Only commercial CAR-T products were considered. Atrial arrhythmias were nearly fourfold more likely to be reported after CAR-T therapy compared to all other cancer patients in the FAERS (adjusted ROR = 3.76 [95% CI 2.67–5.29]). Of the 236 patients in our institutional cohort, 23 (10%) developed atrial arrhythmias post-CAR-T, including 12 de novo arrhythmias, with most (83%) requiring medical intervention. Atrial arrhythmias frequently co-occurred with cytokine release syndrome and were associated with higher post-CAR-T infusion peak levels of IL-10, TNF-alpha and LDH, and lower trough levels of fibrinogen. In a multivariable analysis, risk factors for atrial arrhythmia were history of atrial arrhythmia (OR = 6.80 [2.39–19.6]) and using CAR-T product with a CD28-costimulatory domain (OR = 5.17 [1.72–18.6]). Atrial arrhythmias following CD19-CAR-T therapy are prevalent and associated with elevated inflammatory biomarkers, a history of atrial arrhythmia and the use of a CAR-T product with a CD28 costimulatory domain.

Original languageEnglish
JournalBritish Journal of Haematology
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2024
Externally publishedYes

Funding

FundersFunder number
Long Island Sound Chapter—Swim Across America
Long Island Sound Chapter
New York Academy of Medicine
Swim Across America
National Institutes of Health
American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy
American Society of Hematology
National Cancer InstituteK08 CA282987
National Cancer Institute

    Keywords

    • atrial arrhythmias
    • cardio-oncology
    • cardiotoxicity
    • chimeric antigen receptor T cell
    • immunotherapy

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