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Medical Management and Revascularization In An Informative Case

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Title: Medical Management and Revascularization In An Informative Case


1
Medical Management and Revascularization In An
Informative Case
  • Ami A. Shah, MD
  • Disclosures No Relevant Financial Relationships
    with Commercial Interests

2
Objectives
  • Discuss current options for medical management
  • Identify patients who could benefit from
    revascularization
  • Evaluate merits and risks of surgical bypass
    versus angioplasty
  • Recognize current limitations low sample sizes,
    lack of RCT, and few studies evaluating drug
    eluting stents

3
Presentation of Illness
  • 29-year-old Caucasian female transferred to JHH
    for occasional amaurosis fugax without permanent
    visual loss and fatigue.
  • PMH significant for HTN and biopsy proven
    membranous nephropathy postpartum with stable
    renal function
  • 2 years ago during her C-section, BP could be
    measured only in her lower extremities.  
  • Slow onset of fatigue
  • Development of claudication in her upper
    extremities when she has to raise her arms above
    her head or comb her hair.
  • Intermittent lightheadedness

4
Initial Evaluation
  • Early 6/06, shortness of breath
  • Labs hemoglobin 8 9, MCV 68, ESR of 111, and
    ferritin 75
  •  
  • Admitted to an outside hospital for CHF
  • Echo EF 55, mild MR, grade I diastolic
    dysfunction and moderate aortic regurgitation
  • Transferred to another institution
  • Chest CT bilateral carotid artery stenosis and
    subclavian stenosis
  • Angiogram extensive occlusions of main branch
    vessels off aortic arch

5
Initial Management and Transfer
  • Started on prednisone 20 mg TID, a statin, and
    ASA for likely TA.
  • Diuresed HTN managed with amlodipine,
    carvedilol, enalapril
  • Transferred 6/14 to our institution due to unease
    taking care of a patient with Takayasus
  • Felt a little bit better after starting
    prednisone but claudication symptoms persisted
  • ANA negative, ANCA negative, creatinine 0.8
  • Team agreed with the diagnosis of Takayasus
    arteritis

6
Additional History
  • Social History  Works in a dentists office,
    lives in WV with 2 children and husband, no
    tobacco, alcohol, or illicits
  • Family History  Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy,
    CAD, diabetes and hypothyroidism.  No autoimmune
    diseases.

7
Physical Examination
  • Temperature 36.6 Celsius, pulse 74, BP 168/89
    measured in lower extremities, RR 18, O2 sat 98
    RA  
  • Obese
  • RRR, III/VI systolic ejection murmur at RUSB,
    I/IV diastolic murmur at RUSB, I/VI systolic
    murmur at the apex
  • Carotid and subclavian bruits bilaterally
  • Trace BLE edema
  • No brachial or radial pulses bilaterally, 2 plus
    DP and PT pulses
  • Normal CN and strength exam

8
Frequency of clinical features of Takayasu
arteritis at presentation and during the course
of disease
Kerr, G. S. et. al. Ann Intern Med
1994120919-929
9
Laboratory data
  • K 5.6, BUN 51, creatinine 1.1 to 1.3
  • WBC 14.7 with 89 neutrophils, hematocrit 36.5,
    MCV 74.8, RDW 21, platelets 414,000
  • ESR 36, CRP lt 0.3
  • pro-BNP 300
  • Urinalysis no proteinuria and bland sediment
  • Echocardiogram EF 65, trace MR and TR, moderate
    AR, and aortic root size upper limit of normal
  • Chest x-ray obesity, normal cardiac silhouette.

10
JHH Admission 1 (6/14-17/06) Management
  • Pulsed with 1 gram of methylprednisolone IV daily
    for 3 days
  • Fatigability and claudication symptoms improved
  • Cardiology recommended Q6 month echocardiograms
    to monitor aortic root size
  • Discharged home on prednisone 60 mg daily,
    methotrexate at 0.6 mL subcutaneously weekly
    25mg/mL, folate, baby aspirin, her
    anti-hypertensive agents, a statin,
    levothyroxine, metformin, dapsone, Ca, and VitD
    with Vasculitis Center follow-up.

11
Readmission (7/15-22/06)
  • At home several episodes of syncope after
    laughing and continued blurry vision.
  • Readmitted to an outside institution and
    transferred to JHH
  • Working hypothesis Likely sustained vessel
    damage from prior disease with extensive residual
    stenoses compromising cerebral perfusion pressure

12
MRI/MRA of chest and abdomen
  • Ascending aorta at the pulmonary artery measured
    3.8 cm
  • Markedly narrowed right and left common carotid
    arteries in the neck, right subclavian and
    axillary artery
  • Left subclavian and axillary artery beyond the
    left vertebral markedly narrowed
  • Right vertebral artery small but patent with
    surrounding increased T2 signal consistent with
    inflammation
  • Mild narrowing of the celiac artery at its origin
    with mild post stenotic dilation.
  • Patent SMA and no significant renal artery
    stenosis

13
  • MRI demonstration of carotid wall thickening and
    lumen narrowing and beading, especially on the
    left.

14
  • Mild narrowing of the celiac and SMA reported on
    MRI

15
  • Mild dilatation of the aorta but no aortic wall
    thickening in this image.

16
  • Right carotid artery thickening

17
Carotid duplex
  • Left CCA occluded with no demonstrable flow.
  • Left ICA and ECA not visible and presumably
    occluded. Small collateral vessels seen lateral
    to the expected location of the left CCA.
  • Left subclavian and axillary arteries narrowed
    but not completely occluded.
  • Right CCA markedly narrowed, gt70 stenosis. Wall
    of the right CCA markedly thickened
  • Right vertebral artery exhibits retrograde flow,
    suggestive of a steal phenomenon.

18
Cardiac evaluation and management
  • Leg SBP as high as 240
  • Captopril and metoprolol doses titrated upward
    with a goal SBP of 160-180
  • Repeat echo unchanged
  • Tried to obtain angiography and cardiac
    catheterization records from VA to obtain
    pressures measured proximal and distal to her
    stenoses

19
Ophthalmic Evaluation
  • Ophthalmodynamometry extremely poor retinal
    perfusion despite SBP 200s
  • Fluoroscein angiography normal bilaterally

20
Vascular surgery
  • Consulted given inactive disease detected on
    MRI/MRA.
  • Good revascularization candidate but desired CTA
    of head, neck and chest which demonstrated
    similar findings to MRI/A.
  • Left CCA displayed marked wall thickening and
    narrowing with the string sign which extends
    superiorly to approximately C3 level.
  • Debated surgical bypass versus angioplasty /-
    stent

21
Medical Management
22
Corticosteroids
  • 60 patients followed prospectively 1970-1990 at
    NIH
  • 48 patients treated with GC alone or with a
    cytotoxic agent
  • Remission achieved in 60 treated with prednisone
    alone at doses of 1mg/kg/day for 1-3 mos median
    time to remission 22 months
  • gt50 relapse during taper
  • Development of new lesions at previously
    unaffected sites is common
  • 25 patients required addition of cytotoxic agents
  • 23 of all treated patients never achieved
    remission

Kerr, G. S. et. al. Ann Intern Med
1994120919-929
23
Methotrexate
  • Open-label pilot study of weekly low-dose MTXGC
  • Outcomes Measured clinical characteristics,
    labs, angiographic findings, and ability to
    withdraw GC and MTX therapy
  • Remission no clinical or new angiographic signs
    of active disease
  • Subjects 18 patients entered 2 dropped out, 16
    followed for a mean period of 2.8 years (range
    1.3-4.8 years)
  • Methods starting dose of methotrexate 15mg
    Qweek doses increased up to 25mg/week to achieve
    remission

Hoffman, G.S. et. al. Arthritis Rheum. 1994
Apr37(4)578-82
24
Methotrexate Results
  • Weekly administration of MTX (mean stable dose of
    17.1 mg) and GC ? remissions in 81
  • 7 patients (44) relapsed as GC tapered
  • Retreatment led to remission. 3/7 successfully
    stopped GC
  • Of those who achieved remission, 50 sustained
    remissions of 4-34 months (mean 18 months)
  • 4 did not require GC or MTX for 7-18 months (mean
    11.3 months)
  • 3 patients had disease progression in spite of
    treatment

Hoffman, G.S. et. al. Arthritis Rheum. 1994
Apr37(4)578-82
25
Azathioprine
  • 1996-2001 15 of 65 consecutive newly diagnosed
    patients with TA not previously treated by any
    immunosuppressive therapy had active disease
  • Active disease (2 or more) constitutional
    features, painful arteries, elevated ESR,
    elevated CRP
  • Treatment Azathioprine 2mg/kg/day and
    prednisolone 1mg/kg/day for 6 weeks to be tapered
    to 5-10 mg/day by 12 weeks
  • Angiograms before therapy and at one year
    follow-up

Valsakumar, A.K. et. al. J Rheumatol. 2003
Aug30(8)1793-8
26
Azathioprine Results
  • All had complete resolution of systemic symptoms
  • ESR and CRP decreased significantly at 3 months
  • No change in peripheral pulses or limb BPs
  • No progression or regression of lesions in any
    patient
  • No new lesions identified

Valsakumar, A.K. et. al. J Rheumatol. 2003
Aug30(8)1793-8
27
Mycophenolate Case Reports
  • Italian group with 3 patients with refractory TA
  • Mycophenolate mofetil 1gm po BID.
  • Clinical evaluation and WBC done weekly. Vascular
    lesions assessed by Doppler ultrasonography
  • All 3 showed clinical benefit, and 2 resumed work
  • Able to taper off steroid

Daina, E. et. al. Ann Intern Med. 1999 Mar
2130(5)422-6
28
Cyclophosphamide
  • 20 TA patients prospectively followed for average
    4.6 yrs
  • 16 with active TA treated with GC 8 responded
  • 7 had poor response to prednisone (1mg/kg daily)
    after 3 mos
  • 6/7 patients had clinical or angiographic
    progression on GC
  • All 7 given cyclophosphamide 2mg/kg/day plus
    prednisone tapered to alternate day dosing
  • 4/6 no progression of vascular lesions while on
    cyclophosphamide
  • 2/6 progression of vascular lesions after 30 and
    48 mos of therapy

Shelhamer J.H. et. al. Ann Intern Med. 1985
Jul103(1)121-6
29
TNF Inhibitors
  • Open-label trial of anti-TNF therapy at 3
    academic centers over 4.25 years
  • 15 patients with active, relapsing TA (median 6
    yrs) on GC ( other immunosuppression in 13)
  • Median prednisone dose required to maintain
    remission 20mg
  • No other agents added to the treatment regimen
    concurrently
  • If receiving cytotoxic agents, dosage not
    increased
  • Clinical symptoms, physical exams, labs, and
    serial MRI

Hoffman, G.S. et. al. Arthritis Rheum. 2004
Jul50(7)2296-304
30
TNF Inhibitors
  • 10 had complete remission for 1-3.3 yrs without
    GC.
  • 4 had partial remission with gt50 reduction in GC
    dose.
  • At 12 months followup, median dose of prednisone
    zero.
  • Therapy failed in 1 patient.
  • Repeated imaging revealed that 5 patients (2 CR,
    2 PR, and
  • 1 treatment failure) had new lesions over 12
    month followup
  • In 9/14 responders, increased anti-TNF dosage
    required to sustain remission.
  • 2 relapses when etanercept interrupted. Remission
    reestablished upon restarting etanercept.

Hoffman, G.S. et. al. Arthritis Rheum. 2004
Jul50(7)2296-304
31
Revascularization Surgical Bypass Or
Percutaneous Intervention?
32
Revascularization
  • Diagnosis occurs when stenotic and occlusive
    lesions already exist
  • Such lesions are not reversible by medical
    management
  • Often hemodynamically significant

Liang, P. et. al. Curr Opin Rheumatol. 2005
Jan17(1)16-24
33
Indications for revascularization
  • Cerebrovascular disease due to cervicocranial
    vessel stenosis
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Moderate-severe aortic regurgitation
  • Severe coarctation of the aorta
  • Renovascular hypertension
  • Limb claudication
  • Progressive aneurysm enlargement with risk of
    rupture or dissection

Liang, P. et. al. Curr Opin Rheumatol. 2005
Jan17(1)16-24
34
Surgical Bypass
Liang, P. et. al. Curr Opin Rheumatol. 2005
Jan17(1)16-24
35
Percutaneous Revascularization
Liang, P. et. al. Curr Opin Rheumatol. 2005
Jan17(1)16-24
36
Surgical Bypass NIH Series 1970-1990
  • 60 patients prospectively followed
  • 68 had extensive vascular disease
  • Stenotic lesions 3.6-fold more common than
    aneurysms (98 vs 27).
  • ESR not a consistently reliable marker of disease
    activity.
  • Bypass biopsy specimens from clinically inactive
    patients showed histologically active disease in
    44.
  • Clinically significant palliation after bypass
  • Medical therapy required for 80 20 had
    monophasic self-limiting disease.

Kerr, G. S. et. al. Ann Intern Med
1994120919-929
37
Vascular Procedures and Complications among 60
Patients with Takayasu Arteritis
Kerr, G. S. et. al. Ann Intern Med
1994120919-929
38
Surgical Bypass NIH Series 1970-1990
  • 50 bypass procedures in 23 patients
  • Median follow-up 5.3 yrs
  • 24 restenosis rate, unclear how many
    hemodynamically significant
  • 36 of 39 procedures using synthetic grafts
    complicated by restenosis
  • 9 of 11 procedures using autologous vessels
    associated with restenosis

Kerr, G. S. et. al. Ann Intern Med
1994120919-929
39
Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty NIH Series
1970-1990
  • 20 PTA procedures done in 11 patients
  • PTA procedures most often done on subclavian and
    renal vessels
  • Only 56 of angioplasties successful on the 1st
    attempt
  • Only 33 succeeded on a 2nd attempt
  • Restenosis occurred within 3.5 to 13.6 months.
  • 3 patients eventually required bypass

Kerr, G. S. et. al. Ann Intern Med
1994120919-929
40
Cleveland Clinic 1979-2001
  • Retrospective chart review of 20 TA patients
  • Primary outcome measure patency of vessels by
    repeat invasive angiography or MRA
  • Secondary outcome measures periprocedural
    complications, morbidity, and mortality
  • Interventions bypass grafts, patch angioplasty,
    endarterectomy, percutaneous transluminal
    angioplasty (PTA), or stent placement.

Liang, P. et. al. J Rheumatol 200431102-106
41
Cleveland Clinic 1979-2001
Liang, P. et. al. J Rheumatol 200431102-106
42
Cleveland Clinic 1979-2001
  • 62 revascularization procedures in 20 patients.
    Followup available for 52 procedures.
  • 11/31 bypass grafts restenosed between 1 day to
    168 months after surgery
  • 3/7 PTA restenosed after 1-72 mos
  • 5/7 stents restenosed after 2-45 months
  • No deaths
  • CONCLUSION Despite providing short term benefit,
    endovascular revascularization procedures
    associated with a high failure rate in TA.

Liang, P. et. al. J Rheumatol 200431102-106
43
Renal Revascularization in TA-induced RAS
  • 27 patients with TA-induced RAS underwent
    intervention
  • Primary patency rates determined
  • Late effects on BP, renal and cardiac function,
    survival analyzed
  • All had HTN (mean BP, 167/99 mm Hg 2.5
    antihypertensive medications per patient).
  • Mean estimated GFR in patients not receiving HD
    was 76 mL/min.
  • 3 patients HD-dependent
  • 2 had intractable congestive heart failure
  • 40 interventions 32 aortorenal bypass, 2 repeat
    implantations, 4 nephrectomies, 2 transluminal
    angioplasties
  • Autologous grafts in 20, prosthetic materials in
    12

Weaver, F.A. et. al. J Vasc Surg. 2004
Apr39(4)749-57
44
Renal Revascularization in TA-induced RAS
  • Postoperative morbidity 19. No deaths.
  • 3 graft stenoses, all due to intimal hyperplasia
    2 revised successfully
  • 3 graft occlusions
  • At 1, 3, and 5 years of follow-up, primary
    patency was 87, 79, and 79, respectively
  • Decreased BP to a mean of 132/79 mm Hg (Plt.0001)
  • Need for antihypertensive medications reduced to
    1/patient (Plt.01).
  • Mean GFR increased to 88 mL/min (Plt.005)
  • 2 patients no longer required HD.
  • CHF resolved in both patients

Weaver, F.A. et. al. J Vasc Surg. 2004
Apr39(4)749-57
45
Surgical Outcomes 1955-1995
  • Retrospective review of 106 consecutive patients
    with TA who underwent surgical treatment
  • Ages 5 to 69 years (mean/-SEM, 31.7/-1.3 years)
  • 12 early hospital deaths, all in patients
    operated before 1981
  • Remaining 94 followed for a mean of 19.8 years
  • 31/94 died CHF cause of death in 45
  • Serious long-term complication anastomotic
    aneurysm, cumulative incidence at 20 years of
    13.8.
  • Overall cumulative survival rate at 20 years was
    73.5.

Miyata, T. et. al. Circulation. 2003 Sep
23108(12)1474-80
46
Surgical Outcomes 1955-1995
  • Patients classified according to Ishikawa
    prognostic criteria preop1, 15 year survival rate
    in Stage 3 patients was 82
  • Complications retinopathy, severe HTN, grade 3
    or 4 AR, aneurysms2

1 Miyata, T. et. al. Circulation. 2003 Sep
23108(12)1474-80 2 Ishikawa, K. et. al.
Circulation. 1994 Oct90(4)1855-60
47
Surgical Outcomes 1955-1995
  • Surgery seemed to increase the long-term survival
    of patients with stage 3 TA
  • Conservative treatment recommended for stage 1 or
    2 disease
  • Anastomotic aneurysms occur at any time after
    surgery ? need lifetime serial imaging to detect
    early aneurysms.

Miyata, T. et. al. Circulation. 2003 Sep
23108(12)1474-80
48
Coronary involvement
  • 1972-2001 81/130 TA patients had selective
    coronary angiography 31 had abnormal coronary
    angiographic findings
  • 24 coronary artery stenoses gt 75, 3 coronary
    artery-bronchial artery anastomoses, 3 aneurysmal
    coronary ectasias
  • Among stenoses, ostium most frequently involved
    (87.5)
  • 23/24 patients with stenoses treated surgically
  • Mean follow-up 9.65 years, 100 follow-up rate
  • 2 (8.7) in-hospital deaths and 3 (13) late
    deaths patency gt 85
  • Actuarial survival rate 86.5 /- 7.3 at 5 years
    and 81.4 /- 8.4 at 10 years

Endo, M. et. al. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2003
Mar125(3)570-7
49
Subclavian artery angioplasty 1986-1995
  • 61 SC artery angioplasties done in 55 consecutive
    patients with aortoarteritis (n 32) and
    atherosclerosis (n 23)
  • PTA for 56 stenotic lesions and 5 total
    occlusions
  • PTA successful in 52 (92.8) stenotic lesions and
    3 (60) total occlusions
  • 3 patients (5.4) had complications, managed
    nonsurgically

Tyagi, S. et. al. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol.
1998 May-Jun21(3)219-24
50
Subclavian artery angioplasty 1986-1995
  • Patients with aortoarteritis
  • younger
  • female
  • diffuse involvement
  • Required higher balloon inflation pressures
  • Had more residual stenosis
  • Luminal diameter of stenoses were similar before
    PTA

51
Subclavian artery angioplasty 1986-1995
  • Mean 43.3 mos follow-up of 40 patients
  • Restenosis more often observed in aortoarteritis,
    particularly in those with diffuse arterial
    narrowing
  • Lesions could be effectively redilated
  • Clinical symptoms showed marked improvement after
    successful angioplasty.

Tyagi, S. et. al. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol.
1998 May-Jun21(3)219-24
52
Balloon angioplasty for renovascular HTN
  • PTA of renal arteries performed in 54 consecutive
    patients with hypertension and TA-induced RAS
  • Angioplasty successful in 67 (89.3) of 75
    lesions attempted.
  • Degree of stenosis decreased from 88.3 to 23.5
    (p lt 0.001)

Tyagi, S. et. al. Am Heart J. 1993 May125(5 Pt
1)1386-93
53
Balloon angioplasty for renovascular HTN
  • Improvement in HTN (p lt 0.001) in 48 hrs
  • After mean 26.4 mos follow-up, BP reduced to
    normal or improved in 93
  • Angiographic restudy an average of 14 mos after
    restenosis at the same site in 7 of 52 (13.5)
    lesions

Tyagi, S. et. al. Am Heart J. 1993 May125(5 Pt
1)1386-93
54
Who benefits from revascularization?
1 Miyata, T. et. al. Circulation. 2003 Sep
23108(12)1474-80 2 Ishikawa, K. et. al.
Circulation. 1994 Oct90(4)1855-60
55
Summary of Bypass vs Angioplasty in TA
  • Fibrotic, noncompliant vessels ? incomplete
    dilatation
  • Need higher balloon inflation pressures and
    repeated inflation of the balloon
  • Persistent inflammation at time of
    dilatation/stenting ? enhanced myointimal
    proliferation
  • Stenotic lesions in TA long compared to the
    short, segmental lesions of atherosclerosis
  • Bypass grafting has best long term patency rates
  • Data with drug eluting stents needed

56
Back to our patient
  • Decision made to taper glucocorticoids over 2
    months to 20mg daily and increase MTX to 17.5mg
    weekly
  • Plan for surgical bypass to improve cerebral
    perfusion once at lower steroid dose
  • Unable to taper beyond 30mg daily due to rising
    ESR

57
Operative Intervention
  • 9/15/06 ascending aorta to left carotid
    bifurcation bypass with Dacron graft
  • Left axillary artery explored for planned bypass
    to that vessel but thrombosed all the way out to
    the axilla
  • Postoperative course unable to extend left wrist
    and fingers possibly due to brachial plexus
    injury during exposure of distal left axillary
    artery
  • Visual symptoms resolved on POD 2
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