BackgroundPatients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) typically have systemic arterial calcification and can develop circumferential arteriosclerosis. In carotid stenosis, this circumferential calcification may render carotid artery stenting (CAS) unfavorable due to increased risk of incomplete stent expansion. This study aimed to investigate whether carotid endarterectomy (CEA) or CAS is the preferred treatment option for patients with CKD. MethodsPatients with CKD (eGFR<60 mL/min/1.73m2) who underwent CEA and CAS were identified in ACS-NSQIP targeted database from 2011-2021. Emergent cases were excluded. Symptomatic and asymptomatic patients were examined separately. Thirty-day outcomes included mortality, stroke, cardiac events, renal dysfunction, and re-stenosis were examined by multivariable logistic regression. Restenosis was likely due to incomplete stent expansion in CAS and residual plaque in CEA. ResultsIn symptomatic patients, there were 4,522 CEA and 301 CAS cases. In asymptomatic patients, there were 7,198 CEA and 411 CAS cases identified. In both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients, there was no difference in mortality or cardiac events between CEA and CAS. In symptomatic patients, CEA has lower renal complication (0.62% vs 2.33%, aOR=0.539, p=0.03) than CAS but there was no difference in stroke or restenosis. On the other hand, in asymptomatic patients, CEA was associated with lower stroke (1.38% vs 4.38%, aOR=0.372, p<.01) and re-stenosis (0.25% vs 1.95%, aOR=0.167, p<.01). ConclusionCEA should be preferred for managing symptomatic patients with CKD, as it is associated with 1.9 times lower renal complications compared to CAS. For asymptomatic patients with CKD, given that CEA has 2.7 times lower 30-day stroke rate and 6 times lower restenosis rate, CEA should also be the preferred approach for management.
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