Carotid Artery Stenting in Patients with Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Stenosis: In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes at a Single Neurovascular Center
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Patient Selection and Evaluation
- patients diagnosed with atherosclerotic proximal ICA stenosis.
- no limit on patient age.
- symptomatic patients with no limit on the degree of stenosis or preprocedural modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score.
- asymptomatic patients with ICA stenosis >50% or <50% stenosis with vulnerable plaques (i.e., plaque-sealing). A plaque was considered vulnerable if its contour or surface was extraordinarily irregular or ulcerated and, thus, if the plaque was likely to have caused the most recent neurologic events.
- patients with radiation-induced stenosis.
- patients with post-CEA re-stenosis.
2.2. Intervention Protocol and Technical Data
2.3. Post-Procedural Period
- Transient ischemic attack (TIA)—a reversible focal neurological deficit of short duration (<3 h) without stroke.
- Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (CHS)—diagnosed based on clinical symptoms that range from headaches to seizures and focal neurological defects associated with brain edema and intracerebral or subarachnoid hemorrhage. While CHS has been linked to impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation [18], the underlying pathophysiology of this syndrome is not yet fully understood.
- Stroke—defined as an acute focal neurological deficit with cerebral ischemia and categorized as
- Non-disabling—an increase on the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of ≤2 points from pre-stroke status, or
- Disabling—an increase on the mRS of 3 points or more.
- A creatine kinase (CK)-defined myocardial infarction—CK-myocardial band (MB) or troponin levels that were greater or equal to two times the upper limit of the normal range, together with chest pain, symptoms consistent with ischemia, and/or development of specific abnormalities on a standard 12-lead electrocardiogram.
2.4. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Intraprocedural Complications
- Five patients developed ICA dissection.
- Three patients were diagnosed with distal embolization as documented in the final angiogram.
- One patient developed perforation of a side branch of the external carotid artery due to unexpected and excessive wire relaxation. The lesion was glue-embolized immediately.
- While two patients exhibited TIAs, new-onset cerebral ischemia was not observed.
3.2. Primary Endpoints
- Ten patients developed disabling strokes.
- Four patients died while in the hospital. All four were stroke-associated deaths among patients in the symptomatic group. The deaths were the result of severe bleeding associated with CHS.
- The five non-stroke deaths resulted from sepsis secondary to respiratory or urogenital infections; one patient died as a result of spontaneous cardiac arrest.
3.3. Secondary Endpoints
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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n (%) | ||
---|---|---|
Symptomatic | Total | 522 (45.1%) |
Acute ipsilateral stroke during the last 7 days | 214 (18.5%) | |
Chronic hemodynamic ischemia | 141 (12.2%) | |
TIA * | 111 (9.6%) | |
Amaurosis fugax | 56 (4.8%) | |
Asymptomatic | Total | 636 (54.9%) |
Total (n = 1158) | Asymptomatic (n = 636) | Symptomatic (n = 522) | p | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | Female | 342 (29.5%) | 187 (29.4%) | 155 (29.7%) | 0.948 * |
Male | 816 (70.5%) | 449 (70.6%) | 367 (70.3%) | ||
Age (years) | Median | 71 | 71 | 72 | 0.809 ** |
Range | 41–96 | 46–94 | 41–96 | ||
≥80 (n, %) | 193 (16.7%) | 91 (14.3%) | 102 (19.5%) | ||
Atrial fibrillation | 126 (10.9%) | 72 (11.3%) | 54 (10.3%) | 0.636 * | |
Diabetes mellitus | 402 (34.7%) | 195 (30.7%) | 207 (39.7%) | 0.002 * | |
History of tobacco use | 284 (24.5%) | 145 (22.8%) | 139 (26.6%) | 0.149 * | |
Arterial hypertension | 957 (82.6%) | 521 (81.9%) | 436 (83.5%) | 0.484 * | |
Peripheral artery disease | 235 (20.3%) | 137 (21.5%) | 98 (18.8%) | 0.271 * | |
Coronary artery disease | 450 (38.9%) | 284 (44.7%) | 166 (31.8%) | <0.001 * | |
History of myocardial infarction | 223 (19.3%) | 139 (21.9%) | 84 (16.1%) | 0.014 * | |
Cardiac pacemaker | 54 (4.7%) | 36 (5.7%) | 18 (3.4%) | 0.092 * | |
Chronic renal insufficiency | 149 (12.9%) | 77 (12.1%) | 72 (13.8%) | 0.428 * | |
Fibromuscular dysplasia | 6 (0.5%) | 4 (0.6%) | 2 (0.4%) | 0.696 * | |
Dyslipidemia | Hypercholesterolemia | 350 (30.2%) | 193 (30.3%) | 157 (30.1%) | 0.037 # |
Hypertriglyceridemia | 12 (1%) | 3 (0.5%) | 9 (1.7%) | ||
Hyperlipoproteinemia | 114 (9.8%) | 54 (8.5%) | 60 (11.5%) | ||
Combined dyslipidemia | 103 (8.9%) | 51 (8%) | 52 (10%) | ||
Body mass index, (BMI) kg/m2 (median, range) | 26 (15–47) | 26 (15–43) | 26 (16–47) | 0.235 * | |
Previous neck radiation | 44 (3.8%) | 24 (3.8%) | 20 (3.8%) | 1.000 * | |
Previous CEA *** | 71 (6.1%) | 51 (8%) | 20 (3.8%) | 0.003 * |
Total (n = 1158) | Female (n = 342) | Male (n = 816) | |
---|---|---|---|
Age (median, range) | 71, 41–96 | 71, 41–92 | 71.5, 44–96 |
Arterial hypertension | 957 (82.6%) | 274 (80.1%) | 683 (83.7%) |
Dyslipidemia (all) | 579 (50%) | 176 (51.5%) | 403 (49.4%) |
Diabetes mellitus | 402 (34.7%) | 114 (33.3%) | 288 (35.3%) |
Coronary artery disease | 450 (38.9%) | 110 (32.2%) | 340 (41.7%) |
Peripheral artery disease | 235 (20.3%) | 60 (17.5%) | 175 (21.4%) |
Total (n = 1158) | Asymptomatic (n = 636) | Symptomatic (n = 522) | p | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Contralateral ICA stenosis | 25–50% | 104 (9%) | 54 (8.5%) | 50 (9.6%) | <0.001 # |
50–75% | 126 (10.9%) | 63 (9.9%) | 63 (12.1%) | ||
>75% | 46 (4%) | 14 (2.2%) | 32 (6.1%) | ||
Stent | 77 (6.6%) | 61 (9.6%) | 16 (3.1%) | ||
Contralateral ICA occlusion | acute | 7 (0.6%) | 5 (0.8%) | 2 (0.4%) | 0.659 # |
chronic | 129 (11.1%) | 69 (10.8%) | 60 (11.5%) | ||
Contralateral acute stroke | 45 (3.9%) | 27 (4.2%) | 18 (3.4%) | 0.543 * | |
Location of stenosis | right | 635 (54.8%) | 360 (56.6%) | 275 (52.7%) | 0.192 * |
left | 523 (45.2%) | 276 (43.4%) | 247 (47.3%) | ||
NASCET ** (%) | <50% | 19 (1.6%) | 14 (2.2%) | 5 (1%) | 0.080 # |
50–69% | 309 (26.7%) | 180 (28.3%) | 129 (24.7%) | ||
70–99% | 830 (71.7%) | 442 (69.5%) | 388 (74.3%) | ||
Ulceration | 507 (43.8%) | 254 (39.9%) | 253 (48.5%) | 0.004 * | |
Pre/poststenotic dilatation | pre | 62 (5.4%) | 34 (5.3%) | 28 (5.4%) | 0.157 * |
post | 302 (26.1%) | 180 (28.3%) | 122 (23.4%) |
Total (n = 1158) | Asymptomatic (n = 636) | Symptomatic (n = 522) | p * | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name of stent | CGuard™ | 28 (2.4%) | 13 (2%) | 15 (2.9%) | 0.011 |
CASPER™ | 2 (0.2%) | 2 (0.3%) | 0 (0%) | ||
Cristallo™ | 91 (7.9%) | 66 (10.4%) | 25 (4.8%) | ||
Gore® | 8 (0.7%) | 5 (0.8%) | 3 (0.6%) | ||
Herculink® | 1 (0.1%) | 1 (0.2%) | 0 (0%) | ||
Protégé™ | 69 (6%) | 35 (5.5%) | 34 (6.5%) | ||
Wallstent™ | 955 (82.5%) | 512 (80.5%) | 443 (84.9%) | ||
Xact® | 4 (0.3%) | 2 (0.3%) | 2 (0.4%) | ||
Stent design | Closed-cell | 961 (83%) | 516 (81.1%) | 445 (85.2%) | 0.071 |
Open-cell | 197 (17%) | 120 (18.9%) | 77 (14.8%) |
Total (n = 1158) | Asymptomatic (n = 636) | Symptomatic (n = 522) | OR (95% CI) | p * | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Disabling stroke | 10 (0.9%) | 3 (0.5%) | 7 (1.3%) | 2.87 (0.74–11.17) | 0.124 | |
Death | Stroke-associated deaths | 4 (0.3%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (0.8%) | 0.041 | |
Non-stroke deaths | 5 (0.4%) | 3 (0.5%) | 2 (0.4%) | 1.000 | ||
Disabling stroke and all deaths | 19 (1.6%) | 6 (0.9%) | 13 (2.5%) | 2.68 (1.01–7.12) | 0.060 |
Study Name | Total CAS * | Periprocedural Disabling Stroke and/or Death | Periprocedural Minor/Non-Disabling Stroke |
---|---|---|---|
CREST [9] | 594 | 2.5% (n = 15) | 2.0% (n = 12) |
SAPPHIRE [26] | 159 | 4.4% (n = 7) | 3.1% (n = 5) |
SPACE-2 Interim [27] | 197 | 2.5% (n = 5) | 6.6% (n = 13) |
ACT 1 [25] | 1072 | 2.9% (n = 31) | 2.4% (n = 26) |
ACST-2 [4] | 1811 | 0.8% (n = 15) | 2.7% (n = 48) |
This study | 1158 | 1.6% (n = 19) | 2.0% (n = 23) |
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Hajiyev, K.; Hellstern, V.; Cimpoca, A.; Wendl, C.; Bäzner, H.; Henkes, H.; von Gottberg, P. Carotid Artery Stenting in Patients with Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Stenosis: In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes at a Single Neurovascular Center. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 2086. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11082086
Hajiyev K, Hellstern V, Cimpoca A, Wendl C, Bäzner H, Henkes H, von Gottberg P. Carotid Artery Stenting in Patients with Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Stenosis: In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes at a Single Neurovascular Center. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(8):2086. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11082086
Chicago/Turabian StyleHajiyev, Kamran, Victoria Hellstern, Alexandru Cimpoca, Christina Wendl, Hansjörg Bäzner, Hans Henkes, and Philipp von Gottberg. 2022. "Carotid Artery Stenting in Patients with Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Stenosis: In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes at a Single Neurovascular Center" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 8: 2086. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11082086
APA StyleHajiyev, K., Hellstern, V., Cimpoca, A., Wendl, C., Bäzner, H., Henkes, H., & von Gottberg, P. (2022). Carotid Artery Stenting in Patients with Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Stenosis: In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes at a Single Neurovascular Center. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(8), 2086. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11082086