Abstract

Proximal occlusion (PO) and distal filter (DF) serve for cerebral embolic protection during carotid artery stenting (CAS). New cerebral lesions at diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) represent a surrogate endpoint for embolisation, though their clinical impact is controversial. We performed a meta-analysis of randomised and observational DW-MRI studies comparing PO and DF during CAS. We searched electronic scientific databases. The primary endpoint was the incidence of new cerebral lesions at DW-MRI; secondary endpoints were the incidence of new ipsilateral and new contralateral cerebral lesions at DW-MRI and death/cerebrovascular events (CVE). A total of 392 patients (seven studies) received CAS. At DW-MRI after 48 hours 178 patients (48.3%) presented new cerebral lesions. The use of PO versus DF reduced neither the risk of new cerebral lesions (OR [95% confidence interval] 0.65 [0.28-1.52], p=0.32) nor the risk of death/CVE (0.59 [0.22-1.60], p=0.30). Diabetes, baseline stenosis and symptoms significantly modified the risk estimates for new cerebral lesions. In this meta-analysis, one half of patients receiving protected CAS developed new embolic cerebral lesions at DW-MRI, although the overwhelming majority were asymptomatic. Cerebral protection with PO versus DF neither reduced cerebral embolisation nor impacted on clinical outcomes.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call