Abstract

To assess the 30-day clinical outcome of endovascular and surgical revascularisation procedures in patients with carotid obstructive disease (COD) and concomitant coronary artery disease (CAD). Between January 2006 and December 2009, 659 patients with COD and concomitant CAD were treated. The incidence of the primary endpoint (composite of death, MI and stroke) was 4.25% (0.9%, 1.1% and 2.3%, respectively). Acute renal insufficiency occurred in 2.4% and major bleedings in 4.4% of patients. According to the treatment forms patients were divided into three groups: surgical, 185 patients (28.1%), endovascular, 378 (57.4%), and hybrid, 89 (13.5%). Seven patients (1%) were managed medically only. The primary endpoint of the study occurred in 4.8%, 2.4% and 8.6%, respectively, p=0.01. The secondary endpoint, that included the occurrence of renal or respiratory insufficiency and major bleedings occurred in 10.1%, 6.5% and 23.8%, respectively, p<0.001. At multivariate logistic regression analysis renal insufficiency (OR=2.517; 95%CI=1.077-5.883, p=0.03) and treatment group (endovascular: OR=0.369; 95%CI=0.168-0.813, p=0.01 or hybrid: OR=3.098; 95%CI=1.359-7.060, p=0.007) predicted the primary endpoint. Surgical and endovascular treatments yield very good immediate results; the later being less invasive, may be particularly suited to these fragile and complex patients. Long-term follow-up is under assessment.

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