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CAROTID ARTERY DISEASE

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Title: CAROTID ARTERY DISEASE


1
CAROTID ARTERY DISEASE
  • Jehanzeb Bilal, MD
  • PGY-3
  • Elias A. Iliadis, MD
  • Medical Director, Noninvasive Vascular
    Intervention
  • Cooper Heart Institute

2
Patient one
  • 49 year old female presents to her primary care
    physician for a routine check up.
  • PMH unremarkable.
  • Social hx smoker (1PP-30yrs).
  • Family History CAD, HTN, CVA

3
  • VS.97 125/75 65 12
  • Neurological exam normal.
  • Cardiovascular right carotid bruit.
  • The rest of the exam was unremarkable
  • A carotid ultrasound was done.

4
  • The ultrasound revealed a 95 stenosis of the
    left carotid.

5
  • Would you screen for carotid disease in
    asymptomatic patients?
  • What is the value of a carotid bruit on physical
    exam in an asymptomatic patient?
  • What is a hemodynamically significant carotid
    stenosis?
  • Would you further evaluate this patient ?
  • How would you manage her carotid stenosis?

6
The Framingham cohort
  • Evaluation of carotid bruit in this cohort
  • In eight years, a bruit appeared in 66 men and
  • 105 women, all asymptomatic.
  • The incidence increased with age equally in the
    two sexes from 3.5 at 44 to 54 years, to 7.0 at
    65 to 79 years.
  • The eight-year incidence was greater in diabetes
    and hypertensive subjects.
  • These patients had a stroke rate more than twice
    expected for age and sex.
  • JAMA 1981 Apr
    10245(14)1442-5.

7
  • More often cerebral infarction occurred in a
    vascular territory different from that of the
    carotid bruit
  • Ruptured aneurysm, embolism from the heart, and
    lacunar infarction was the mechanism of stroke in
    nearly half the cases.
  • Incidence of myocardial infarction increased
    twofold .
  • General mortality increased 1.7-fold with men,
    and 1.9-fold in women, with 79 of the deaths
    owing to cardiovascular disease, including
    stroke.

8
Conclusion of the study
  • Carotid bruit is clearly an indicator of
    increased stroke risk
  • General and non-focal sign of advanced
    atherosclerotic disease
  • Not necessarily an indicator of local arterial
    stenosis preceding cerebral infarction

9
The natural history of asymptomatic carotid
artery occlusive lesions.
  •  
  • Follow up of 640 neurologically asymptomatic
    patients
  • 292 had pressure-significant internal carotid
    artery stenosis
  • 348 had a carotid bruit only without a
    pressure-significant lesion.
  • Patients with asymptomatic pressure-significant
    carotid stenosis are at greater risk for stroke
    than a non significant occlusion (twofold) and a
    general population (sevenfold).

  • JAMA 1987Nov20258(19)2704-7

10
The natural h/o carotid bruits in the elderly
  • To determine the relative risk for
    cerebrovascular events in elderly patients with
    carotid bruits
  • 241 NH residents were examined for carotid bruits
    and signs of previous stroke.
  • Twelve percent of residents had asymptomatic
    carotid bruits.
  • The 3-year cumulative incidence of strokes was
    10, vs. 9, yielding a relative risk of 1.1 (95
    CI, 0.45 to 2.7).
  • In 60 of surviving residents, baseline carotid
    bruits were no longer present at the time of
    follow-up examination.
  • The disappearance of these bruits was not
    associated with the occurrence of interval
    cerebrovascular events
  • Ann Intern
    Med1990Mar12(5)340-3

11
SHEP
  • The Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program
  • To determine the association between asymptomatic
    carotid bruits and the development of subsequent
    stroke in older adults with isolated systolic
    hypertension.
  • 5-year randomized trial
  • Average follow-up 4.2 years.
  • Carotid bruits were found in (6.4) of the
    participants .
  • Stroke developed in (7.4) of those with carotid
    bruits and in (5.0) of those without carotid
    bruits.
  • J Gen Intern Med 1998
    Feb13(2)86-90

12
  • Relative risk of stroke with asymptomatic carotid
    bruits was 1.29 (95 CI 0.80, 2.06).
  • Subjects aged 60 to 69 years, trend (p.08)
    toward increased risk (relative risk RR 2.05
    95 CI 0.92, 4.68) of subsequent stroke in
    persons with carotid bruits.
  • Subjects aged 70 or over, no relation between
    carotid bruit and subsequent stroke (RR 0.98 95
    CI 0.55, 1.76).

13
The causes and risk of stroke in patient with
internal carotid artery stenosis
  • patients with unilateral symptomatic
    carotid-artery stenosis
  • Patients with asymptomatic contralateral stenosis
  • The risk of stroke at five years after study
    entry in a total of 1820 patients increased with
    the severity of stenosis.
  • N Engl J Med 2000 3431420-1421,
    Nov 9, 2000.

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16
  • Forty-five percent of strokes in patients with
    asymptomatic stenosis of 60 to 99 percent are
    attributable to lacunes or cardioembolism.

17
EVALUATION OF CAROTID DISEASE
18
Conventional angiography
  • Gold standard
  • Visualize the entire cerebrovascular system
  • Invasive test
  • Expensive test
  • Neurological morbidity/mortality

19
Non invasive carotid artery testing. A
meta-analytic review.
  • Carotid angiography as the reference standard for
    comparison.
  • Carotid duplex ultrasonography, carotid Doppler
    ultrasonography, and magnetic resonance
    angiography are all similarly successful at
    predicting
  • -100 carotid artery occlusion (SN 82 to 86,SP
    98)
  • -70 stenosis (SN 83 to 86,SP 89 TO 94 )
  • Other factors, such as cost, availability, and
    local experience may influence the decision to
    use these tests to screen for carotid artery
    atherosclerosis that may respond to surgery
  • Ann Intern Med 1995 Mar
    1122(5)360-7.

20
Ann Int Med 1995,122,P360.
21
Duplex ultrasound and magnetic resonance
angiography compared with digital subtraction
angiography in carotid artery stenosis a
systematic review
  • 64 studies reviewed.
  • MRA has a better discriminatory power compared
    with DUS in diagnosing 70 to 99
    stenosis(SN95vs86/SP90vs87)
  • A sensitive and specific test compared with DSA
    in the evaluation of carotid artery stenosis.
  • For detecting occlusion, both DUS and MRA are
    very accurate.(SN 98 vs. 96/SP 100VS 100)
  • Stroke
    2003 May34(5)1324-32.  

22
Non-invasive imaging compared with intra-arterial
angiography in the diagnosis of symptomatic
carotid stenosis a meta-analysis
  • CEMRA is superior to US,MRA and CTA, with SN 94
    versus 89, 88, and 76 percent, respectively
    specificities 93 versus 84, 84, and 94 percent,
    respectively
  • Lancet. 2006 May
    6367(9521)1503-12

23
Carotid US
  • Least expensive
  • Easy to perform
  • Defines the plaque
  • -The sensitivity and specificity are lower in
    asymptomatic patients
  • -It can overestimate the stenosis unnecessary
    surgery
  • -Less precise in less than 50 stenosis, and
    total occlusion
  • -It only defines cervical disease

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MRA
  • May be more Sensitive and Specific than US (esp.
    CEMRA)
  • Disadvantage
  • -Cannot be done if patient is critically ill , or
    has a pacemaker
  • -Expensive

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27
CTA
  • Used when US is not reliable
  • -Severe calcific artery
  • -Severe kinking of the vessels
  • -Short neck
  • -High bifurcation
  • -Overview of surgical field

28
Can we bypass invasive angiography?
  • Separate and combined test results of DUS and MRA
    were compared with the reference standard DSA.
    Only the stenosis measurements of the arteries on
    the symptomatic side were included in the
    analyses.
  • When MRA and DUS were combined , agreement
    between these 2 modalities (84 of patients) gave
    a sensitivity of 96.3 (95 CI, 90.8 to 99.0)
    and a specificity of 80.2 (95 CI, 73.1 to
    87.3) for identifying severe stenosis(gt70)
  • This combination may obviate the need of an
    invasive angiography ,if the results of both
    tests were similar.
  • Stroke
    2002 Aug33(8)2003-8.

29
Guidelines
  • The United States Preventive Services Task Force
    (USPSTF) recommends against screening for
    asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis in the
    general population .
  • The American Heart Association and American
    Stroke Association acknowledge that "screening of
    general populations for asymptomatic carotid
    stenosis is unlikely to be cost-effective" .
  • The American Society of Neuroimaging suggests
    that, while screening for the general population
    is not recommended, screening might be considered
    for patients 65 years with significant risk
    factors for cardiovascular disease .

30
PREVENTION OF STROKES IN ASYMPTOMATIC BUT
HEMODYNAMICALLY SIGNIFICANT CAROTID ARTERY
STENOSIS.
31
VA STUDY
  • Multicenter clinical trial
  • 444 men with asymptomatic carotid stenosis shown
    arteriographically (50 percent or more).
  • Randomly assigned to optimal medical treatment
    including ASPIRIN plus carotid endarterectomy (
    211 patients) or optimal medical treatment alone
    (233 patients)
  • The incidence of ipsilateral neurologic events
    was 8.0 percent in the surgical group and 20.6
    percent in the medical group (P 0.001), RR of
    0.38 (95 confidence interval,( 0.22 to 0.67).
  • N Engl J Med 1993
    Jan 28328(4)221-7

32
ACAS(asymptomatic carotid atherosclerosis study)
  • Randomized, multicenter trial
  • Total of 1662 patients with asymptomatic carotid
    artery stenosis of 60 or greater
  • medical risk factor management for all patients
    carotid endarterectomy for patients randomized to
    receive surgery.
  • After a median follow-up of 2.7 years, the
    incidence of ipsilateral stroke and any
    perioperative stroke or death rate was
    significantly lower in the surgical group than
    with aspirin alone (5 versus 11 percent) for a
    relative risk reduction of 0.53 (95 CI
    0.22-0.72).
  • Men had an absolute risk reduction of 8 percent
    the absolute risk reduction in women was only 1.4
    percent.

  • JAMA 1995 May 10273(18)1421-8

33
ACST (asymptomatic carotid surgery trial)
  • 3120 asymptomatic patients with 60 stenosis(US)
  • randomized between immediate CEA and indefinite
    deferral of any CEA (4 per year)and were
    followed for up to 5 years.
  • The net five-year risk for all strokes or
    perioperative death in the CEA group was reduced
    by nearly half.
  • The absolute risk reduction over five years was
    greater for men than for women 8.2 percent
    versus 4.08
  • Lancet
    2004 May 8363(9420)1491-502.

34
COCHRANE REVIEW
  • All completed randomized trials comparing CEA to
    medical treatment in patients with asymptomatic
    carotid stenosis
  • 5223 patients were included.
  • Despite about a 3 perioperative stroke or death
    rate, CEA for asymptomatic carotid stenosis
    reduces the risk of ipsilateral stroke, and any
    stroke, by approximately 30 over three years.
  • The absolute risk reduction is small
    (approximately 1 per year over the first few
    years of follow up in the two largest and most
    recent trials) but it could be higher with longer
    follow up.
  • Cochrane Database Syst Rev
    2005(4)CD001923

35
Factors to consider in assessing risk and
benefit of CEA
  • Exclusion criteria (life expectancy of lt five
    years)
  • The severity of stenosis.
  • The presence of newer drugs.
  • The frequency of TIA in carotid disease.

36
  • The differentiation between the nature of
    stroke(cardioembolic and lacunar).
  • The controlateral carotid artery.
  • The Late benefit of CEA.
  • The gender.
  • Postoperative complications.

37
Guidelines
  • For asymptomatic patient with a stenosis of 60
    to 99 ,CEA is recommended only for patients
    aged between 45 and 75 with a life expectance of
    at least five years. NNT 33
  • The benefit of CEA appears only after couple of
    year.
  • ASA should be used pre and postoperatively.

38
Patient two
  • 69 y old female was found to have b/l carotid
    bruit on physical exam. She has no history of
    strokes or transient ischemic attack.
  • PMH CAD with triple vessel disease , CHF with
    diastolic dysfunction, DM, HTN, dyslipidemia.
  • She is a past smoker(40 p/year)
  • Meds coreg, simvastatin, lisinopril, insulin,
    asa, lasix.

39
  • A carotid ultrasound and a conventional
    angiography showed a severe stenosis(more than
    95) of her right ICA ,
  • Is she a candidate for a CEA? What is the current
    data on Carotid Artery Stenting?

40
SAPHIRE(stenting and angioplasty with protection
in patients at high risk of endarterectomy
  • A randomized trial comparing carotid-artery
    stenting with the use of an emboli-protection
    device to endarterectomy
  • 334 patients with coexisting conditions that
    potentially increased the risk posed by
    endarterectomy and who had either a symptomatic
    carotid-artery stenosis of at least 50 percent of
    the luminal diameter or an asymptomatic stenosis
    of at least 80 percent.
  • More than seventy percent of patients had
    asymptomatic disease.
  • Twenty percent had a restenosis after CEA.
  • N Engl J Med 2004 Oct
    7351(15)1493-501.  

41
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42
  • The primary end point was a combined incidence
    of death, stroke and MI in the first thirty days
    postoperatively or death/ipsilateral stroke from
    day 31 up to one year.
  • The study was designed to test the
    non-inferiority of CAS to CEA in this population.

43
  • The primary end point occurred in 20 patients
    randomly assigned to undergo carotid artery
    stenting and in 32 patients randomly assigned
    to undergo endarterectomy (P0.004 for
    noninferiority, and P0.053 for superiority).
  • At one year, carotid revascularization was
    repeated in fewer patients who had received
    stents than in those who had undergone
    endarterectomy (P0.04).
  • CAS is non inferior to CEA in patient with
    carotid artery disease and high risk for surgery.

44
  • The FDA approved the stent used in this trial for
    high risk patients with carotid disease.

45
Guidelines
  • CAS should be considered in patients with severe
    carotid stenosis(gt70) and one of the following
    conditions
  • -Severe medical comorbidities(cardiopulmonary).
  • -Difficult neck access for CEA.
  • -Stenosis after irradiation.
  • -Restenosis after CEA.
  • -Contralateral laryngeal palsy.

46
Patient three
  • 57 year old male presents to the ER with acute
    weakness of his right arm and leg .The symptoms
    started 12 hour ago.
  • He has a h/o of HTN and dyslipidemia, currently
    on lisinopril and simvastatin.
  • Physical exam97 170/100 85 15
  • -He had a 4/5 weakness of his right arm and leg
  • -Cardiovascular exam was unremarkable

47
  • CT scan of the brain without contrast showed
    chronic small vessel disease.
  • MRI brain revealed an acute infarct of left
    middle cerebral artery territory.
  • MRA showed an 90 stenosis of his left carotid
    artery.
  • He was admitted to the stroke unit.

48
Is the management of carotid disease different
in symptomatic patients?
49
NASCET TRIAL(North American Symptomatic Carotid
Endarterectomy Trial)
  • 659 patients with a h/o of stroke in the past 120
    days
  • had 70-90 stenosis of the ipsilateral carotid
    artery.
  • Patients were randomized to medical management
    vs. medical management with CEA.
  • The primary outcome was any stroke or death.
  • The study was prematurely terminated by the NIH
    because of the clear evidence of benefit from
    surgery .
  • At the time of study termination, patients had
    been followed for a mean of 18 months.
  • N Engl J Med 1991 Aug
    15325(7)445-53

50
  • The risk of stroke and death was higher at 30
    days in the patients treated with CEA (5.8 versus
    3.3 percent with medical therapy)
  • longer follow-up revealed a lower cumulative
    risk at two years of any ipsilateral stroke (9
    versus 26 percent, plt0.001)
  • A lower risk of major or fatal ipsilateral stroke
    (2.5 versus 13.1 percent, plt0.001)

51
  • CEA was highly beneficial (9 vs. 26 ,plt0.001)for
    patients with recent TIAs or nondisabling strokes
    with ipsilateral stenosis of 70 to 99
  • moderate degree of benefit for patients with 50
    to 69 percent symptomatic ipsilateral stenosis (
    15.7 versus 22.2) percent (p 0.045)
  • Patients with stenosis of less than 50 percent
    did not benefit from surgery.
  • Elderly patients with 50 to 99 percent stenosis
    benefited more from CEA than younger patients
  • These findings suggest that CEA should not be
    withheld from appropriately selected, fit
    patients over the age of 75.

52
ECST(European carotid surgery trial)
  •  A multicentre trial of 3024 patients
  • randomized to carotid endarterectomy and
    medical management vs. medical management alone
  • All patients had a recent stroke or TIA in a
    carotid artery distribution, and some degree of
    carotid stenosis.
  • Median follow up was for six years.
  • Lancet 1998 May
    9351(9113)1379-87

53
  • The risk of major ischemic stroke ipsilateral to
    the unoperated symptomatic carotid artery
    increased with severity of stenosis, particularly
    above about 70-80 of the original luminal
    diameter, but only for 2-3 years after
    randomization.
  • On average, the immediate risk of surgery
    (7)was worth trading off against the long-term
    risk of stroke without surgery when the stenosis
    was greater than about 80 diameter.
  • For disabling or fatal stroke the control risks
    seemed to diminish after the first year, so delay
    of surgery by just a few months after clinical
    presentation might make this overall difference
    non-significant.  

54
SPACE TRIAL(stent-protected angioplasty versus
carotid endarterectomy )
  • 1200 patients with symptomatic carotid-artery
    stenosis within 180 days of enrollment
  • Patients were randomly assigned carotid-artery
    stenting (n605) or carotid endarterectomy
    (n595).
  • The primary endpoint was ipsilateral ischemic
    stroke or death from time of randomization to 30
    days after the procedure.
  • Non inferiority study.
  • Lancet. 2006 Oct
    7368(9543)1239-47

55
  • The trial was stopped after the second interim
    analysis, mainly due to recruitment and funding
    problems.
  • SPACE failed to prove the non-inferiority of
    carotid-artery stenting compared with carotid
    endarterectomy
  • expressed as the rate of ipsilateral stroke or
    death within 30 days after treatment in
    symptomatic patients with moderate to severe
    stenosis of the carotid artery.
  • The use of embolic protection devices with
    stenting was optional, and were used in only 27
    percent of patients treated with CAS.

56
EVA-S trial(Endarterectomy vs. angioplasty with
stenting)
  • Multicenter, randomized, noninferiority trial to
    compare stenting with endarterectomy in patients
    with a symptomatic carotid stenosis of at least
    60.
  • The primary end point was the incidence of any
    stroke or death within 30 days and six months
    after therapy .
  • N Engl J Med. 2006 Oct
    19355(16)1660-71

57
  • The trial was stopped prematurely after the
    inclusion of 527 patient because of worse outcome
    with the CAS branch.
  • The 30-day incidence of any stroke or death was
    3.9 after endarterectomy (95 confidence
    interval CI, 2.0 to 7.2) and 9.6 after
    stenting (95 CI, 6.4 to 14.0)
  • At 6 months, the incidence of any stroke or death
    was 6.1 after endarterectomy and 11.7 after
    stenting (P 0.02).

58
  • Critics
  • Lack of experience by many of the
    interventionalists doing the CAS.
  • Five different stents and seven different
    cerebral protection devices were used in EVA-3S
  • interventional clinicians were required to have
    performed only two stenting procedures with any
    new device before its use in the trial.
  • Embolic protection for patients assigned to CAS
    was optional early in the trial, and the 30-day
    outcome of any stroke or death was significantly
    lower in patients treated with (n 277) than in
    those treated without (n 20) embolic protection
    (7.9 and 25 percent, respectively).

59
Guidelines
  • For symptomatic carotid artery stenosis of 70 to
    99 with no severe co-morbidities CEA .NNT of
    6.3.
  • For symptomatic stenosis of 50 to 69CEA. NNT of
    22.
  • ASA should be started before surgery and
    continued postoperatively.

60
Conditions associated with less or no benefit
from CEA
  • Severe disabling strokes
  • Transient monocular ischemia VS hemispheric TIA
  • Younger population
  • Total carotid stenosis
  • Controlateral carotid stenosis increase
    perioperative risk

61
Complication of Carotid artery stenting
  • Stroke.
  • Periprocedural bradycardia and hypotension
  • Technical difficulty.
  • Restenosis(early 0.5 to 2,late 0.6 to 6)
  • Hyperperfusion syndrome.

62
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