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Surgical Intervention for Carotid Artery Disease

Surgical Intervention for Carotid Artery Disease. Mr Gabriel Sayer Consultant Vascular Surgeon. Aims. Discuss the role Carotid Artery Stenosis (CAS) in the development of stroke Review different treatment modalities for CAS Appraise best practice guidelines

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Surgical Intervention for Carotid Artery Disease

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  1. Surgical Intervention for Carotid Artery Disease Mr Gabriel Sayer Consultant Vascular Surgeon

  2. Aims • Discuss the role Carotid Artery Stenosis (CAS) in the development of stroke • Review different treatment modalities for CAS • Appraise best practice guidelines • Identify how we can reduce strokes secondary to carotid artery stenosis in our patient population

  3. Why is carotid artery stenosis important? • Risk factor for embolic stroke • Risk factor for ischaemic heart disease • Should therefore consider secondary prevention measures in all patients who have any carotid artery stenosis

  4. What is a carotid stenosis and how do we define it?? • Historical perspective • Clinical evaluation • Diagnostic modalities • Symptomatic ?

  5. Carotid Artery Stenosis (CAS) and Stroke • Historically it was felt that CAS was associated with an increased risk of stroke • Diagnosis was difficult (combination of clinical and angiography) • Fischer M noted that often the carotid vessel distal to the stenosis was normal calibre

  6. Carotid angiography But angiography had a procedural stroke risk of 0.1-1%

  7. Carotid Duplex Scanning

  8. CTA and MRA

  9. What is a symptomatic CAS? • ANY CAS associated with development of focal neurological episode in the area supplied by the corresponding middle cerebral artery or branches thereof

  10. Carotid Artery Stenoses • Symptoms due to narrowing of the Internal Carotid Artery • The narrowing may be irregular promoting production of ‘emboli’ • Patients may suffer Amaurosis Fugax, TIAs or CVAs due to impaired blood supply to the brain

  11. Treatment options • Ligation • Bypass • Endarterectomy

  12. First Carotid Endarterectomy

  13. DeBakey- the greatest surgeon ever? • Worked under Leriche in Strasbourg and Kirschner in Heidelberg • Worked throughout europe during WWII culminating in the development of MASH units • First ever aortic aneurysm repair (1953) • First ever CEA (1953?) • First coronary artery bypass (1964) • First ventricular assist device (1966) • First multi organ transplant ….

  14. The british version • 66 y.o female presented with recurrent bouts on LEFT monocular blindness and RIGHT hemiplegia • Professor Pickering organised a carotid angiogram • Professor Charles Rob supervised his Assistant director Felix Eastcott who undertook the operation

  15. Carotid Endarterectomy

  16. Carotid Endarterectomy

  17. Carotid Endarterectomy

  18. How do we do surgery for CAS? • Local or General anaesthetic? • Patch or not? • Shunt or not? • Eversion or open endarterctomy?

  19. Results count, Method is secondary • GALA trial shows no benefit of LA over GA!

  20. Carotid Endarterectomy- high risk patients • Challenging Anatomy • High carotid bifurcation • Distal disease • Redo operations • Previous surgery or RXT to neck or cranial nerve injury (esp RLN) • Crescendo TIAs • Medical comorbidity

  21. What is evidence for treatment? • ESCT/NASCET • ACST

  22. Level 1 Data in support of CEA as treatment for symptomatic CAS • Doubt over efficacy of the treatment and the advent of managed care led to two trials ECST and NASCET 1991 • Results are now 17 yrs old! • Selected population • Very little risk factor modification

  23. NASCET Vs ECST • NASCET • 1-a/b x 100 = stenosis % • ECST • 1-a/c x 100 = stenosis % So ECST gives greater percentage of stenosis for same lesion

  24. ECST/NASCET a brief summary

  25. ECST/NASCET • Selective criteria for trial e.g. <80 years • NASCET approval required for surgeons • How applicable are these trials to real life

  26. What about asymptomatics CAS? • Casanova 1991 • Veterans affairs study group 1993 • ACAS 1995 • And now the ACST 2005

  27. ACST Summary • Significant reduction of stroke risk in asymptomatics CAS >70% with CEA • Procedural risk <3% major stroke or death • ACST • All stroke reduction of 6.4% versus 11.8% • 3.5% versus 6.1% for fatal or disabling strokes (net gain 2.5%) NNT=40

  28. The End of Carotid Endarterectomy? • Now we can stent them • Is this better? • Is it suitable for all? • Does it last as long? • Should we do asymptomatics?

  29. Potential advantages of carotid stenting • Reduced hospital stay • No wound complications • No cranial nerve injury vs 3-7% for CEA • Reduced cardiovascular complications

  30. BUT.. • Is it durable? • Is there a higher procedural risk of stroke? • Up to 60% not suitable

  31. Evidence • CAVATAS • LEICESTER • WALLSTENT • LEXINGTON Symptomatic and Asymptomatic • EVA-3S • SAPPHIRE • SPACE • ICSS (CAVATS II)

  32. What is Cerebral Protection?

  33. CAS Vs CEA • CEA is proven procedure • CAS has variable results although they appear to be improving with better kit and knowledge base • CAS probably has a 7-10% major stroke/death rate for symptomatic >70% • CAS not suitable for all

  34. CEA vs CAS • The jury is still out and CAS remains the gold standard at present • ICSS trial will report soon and will shed further light on this area

  35. When should we treat patients with intervention? • Within 6 months? • Within 2 weeks? • Within 2 days?

  36. Problems with urgent surgical intervention

  37. How we can reduce strokes secondary to carotid artery stenosis in our patient population ?

  38. Developments here at Queens

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