Literature DB >> 27085660

SPACE-2: A Missed Opportunity to Compare Carotid Endarterectomy, Carotid Stenting, and Best Medical Treatment in Patients with Asymptomatic Carotid Stenoses.

H-H Eckstein1, T Reiff2, P Ringleb2, O Jansen3, U Mansmann4, W Hacke5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Because of recent advances in best medical treatment (BMT), it is currently unclear whether any additional surgical or endovascular interventions confer additional benefit, in terms of preventing late ipsilateral carotid territory ischemic stroke in asymptomatic patients with significant carotid stenoses. The aim was to compare the stroke-preventive effects of BMT alone, with that of BMT in combination with carotid endarterectomy (CEA) or carotid artery stenting (CAS) in patients with high grade asymptomatic extracranial carotid artery stenosis.
METHODS: SPACE-2 was planned as a three-armed, randomized controlled trial (BMT alone vs. CEA plus BMT vs. CAS plus BMT, ISRCTN 78592017). However, because of slow patient recruitment, the three-arm study design was amended (July 2013) to become two parallel randomized studies (BMT alone vs. CEA plus BMT, and BMT alone vs. CAS plus BMT).
RESULTS: The change in study design did not lead to any significant increase in patient recruitment, and trial recruitment ceased after recruiting 513 patients over a 5 year period (CEA vs. BMT (n = 203); CAS vs. BMT (n = 197), and BMT alone (n = 113)). The 30 day rate of death/stroke was 1.97% for patients undergoing CEA, and 2.54% for patients undergoing CAS. No strokes or deaths occurred in the first 30 days after randomization in patients randomized to BMT. There were several potential reasons for the low recruitment rates into SPACE-2, including the ability for referring doctors to refer their patients directly for CEA or CAS outwith the trial, an inability to convince patients (who had come "mentally prepared" that an intervention was necessary) to accept BMT, and other economic constraints.
CONCLUSIONS: Because of slow recruitment rates, SPACE-2 had to be stopped after randomizing only 513 patients. The German Research Foundation will provide continued funding to enable follow up of all recruited patients, and it is also planned to include these data in any future meta-analysis prepared by the Carotid Stenosis Trialists Collaboration.
Copyright © 2016 European Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Best medical treatment; Carotid endarterectomy; Carotid stenosis; Carotid stenting; Randomized trial

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27085660     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejvs.2016.02.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg        ISSN: 1078-5884            Impact factor:   7.069


  19 in total

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3.  Comparative Effectiveness of Carotid Stenting to Medical Therapy Among Patients With Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis.

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5.  Carotid artery stenting versus endarterectomy for treatment of carotid artery stenosis.

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6.  An update on the incidence of perioperative outcomes after carotid endarterectomy, stratified by type of preprocedural neurologic symptom.

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Review 7.  One swallow does not a summer make but many swallows do: accumulating clinical evidence for nearly-eliminated peri-procedural and 30-day complications with mesh-covered stents transforms the carotid revascularisation field.

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Authors:  Jae Hyeong Park; Jae Hwan Lee
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Review 9.  Evidence-Based Carotid Interventions for Stroke Prevention: State-of-the-art Review.

Authors:  Dylan R Morris; Kengo Ayabe; Takashi Inoue; Nobuyuki Sakai; Richard Bulbulia; Alison Halliday; Shinya Goto
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Review 10.  Comparison of long-term results of carotid endarterectomy for asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis.

Authors:  S Demirel; D Böckler; M Storck
Journal:  Gefasschirurgie       Date:  2018-02-05
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