AIMS: This prospective registry study was intended to evaluate outcomes and predictors of adverse events following carotid artery stenting (CAS). METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients received neurological and duplex exams before CAS, prior to discharge and at 30- and 180-day follow-up. Multiple regression analysis included patient- and procedure-related characteristics. The MACCE endpoint comprised stroke, myocardial infarction and death. Three hundred and seventy-five consecutive patients underwent CAS between 1998 and 2011. Mean age was 69±9.1 years; 53% were symptomatic within the preceding six months. Mean time to CAS was 23 days in patients with TIA and 31 days with stroke (p=0.029). The MACCE rate was 1.6% during intervention and 4.0%, 5.6% and 5.9% at discharge, day 30 and day 180, respectively. TIA occurred in 31 cases (9.6%) within 30 days. A history of TIA was independently associated with MACCE (OR: 2.88; p=0.04). Furthermore, a history of hyperlipidaemia (OR: 4.02, p=0.029), MI (OR: 2.93, p=0.007) and age ≥70 (OR: 1.89, p=0.033) were independent predictors for the combined endpoint MACCE plus TIA. CONCLUSIONS: TIA is an underappreciated adverse event following CAS. Pre-procedural TIA was an independent risk factor for adverse outcomes, while stroke was not, probably related to the timing of the procedure relative to the index event.
AIMS: This prospective registry study was intended to evaluate outcomes and predictors of adverse events following carotid artery stenting (CAS). METHODS AND RESULTS:Patients received neurological and duplex exams before CAS, prior to discharge and at 30- and 180-day follow-up. Multiple regression analysis included patient- and procedure-related characteristics. The MACCE endpoint comprised stroke, myocardial infarction and death. Three hundred and seventy-five consecutive patients underwent CAS between 1998 and 2011. Mean age was 69±9.1 years; 53% were symptomatic within the preceding six months. Mean time to CAS was 23 days in patients with TIA and 31 days with stroke (p=0.029). The MACCE rate was 1.6% during intervention and 4.0%, 5.6% and 5.9% at discharge, day 30 and day 180, respectively. TIA occurred in 31 cases (9.6%) within 30 days. A history of TIA was independently associated with MACCE (OR: 2.88; p=0.04). Furthermore, a history of hyperlipidaemia (OR: 4.02, p=0.029), MI (OR: 2.93, p=0.007) and age ≥70 (OR: 1.89, p=0.033) were independent predictors for the combined endpoint MACCE plus TIA. CONCLUSIONS:TIA is an underappreciated adverse event following CAS. Pre-procedural TIA was an independent risk factor for adverse outcomes, while stroke was not, probably related to the timing of the procedure relative to the index event.
Authors: Roland Richard Macharzina; Carolin Müller; Matthias Vogt; Steven R Messé; Werner Vach; Thomas Winker; Michael Weinbeck; Matthias Siepe; Martin Czerny; Franz-Josef Neumann; Thomas Zeller Journal: Clin Res Cardiol Date: 2019-09-25 Impact factor: 5.460
Authors: Adam Mazurek; Krzysztof Malinowski; Kenneth Rosenfield; Laura Capoccia; Francesco Speziale; Gianmarco de Donato; Carlo Setacci; Christian Wissgott; Pasqualino Sirignano; Lukasz Tekieli; Andrey Karpenko; Waclaw Kuczmik; Eugenio Stabile; David Christopher Metzger; Max Amor; Adnan H Siddiqui; Antonio Micari; Piotr Pieniążek; Alberto Cremonesi; Joachim Schofer; Andrej Schmidt; Piotr Musialek Journal: J Clin Med Date: 2022-08-17 Impact factor: 4.964