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http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/4528
Titolo: | Standard carotid endarterectomy versus carotid artery stenting with closed-cell stent design and distal embolic protection: does the age matter? |
Autore: | Peluso, Andrea Turchino, Davide Petrone, Alessio Giribono, Anna Maria Bracale, Renata Del Guercio, Luca Bracale, Umberto Marcello |
Parole chiave: | Carotid artery stenosis;Carotid endarterectomy;Endovascular treatment;Stent;Embolic protection device |
Data: | 2019 |
Citazione: | Peluso A, Turchino D, Petrone A, Giribono AM, Bracale R, Del Guercio L, Bracale UM. Standard carotid endarterectomy versus carotid artery stenting with closed-cell stent design and distal embolic protection: does the age matter? Translational Medicine @ UniSa 2019, 19(10): 60-65. |
Abstract: | Carotid artery endarterectomy (CEA) is considered the gold standard for treatment of symptomatic and asymptomatic carotid disease. Carotid artery stenting (CAS) is a less invasive approach and therefore could be considered a viable alternative to CEA, especially in high-risk patients or those with relative contraindications to CEA (i.e. actinic stenosis, post-CEA restenosis, previous neck or tracheostomy surgery, contralateral laryngeal nerve paralysis, etc.). Methods – The aim of this study is to evaluate the short- and medium-term outcomes of CAS performed with a single type of closed-cell stent design and distal filter protection by comparing the procedure with CEA based upon 3 endpoints: overall survival rate, stroke free survival rate and restenosis free survival rate. The same endpoints were also evaluated in 2 different age groups, more and less than 70 years, to show possible age-based differences on outcomes. Among 105 patients (77 males, 28 females), 74 were submitted to CEA and 31 were subject to CAS. In all cases the same self-expanding stent with closed-cell design (XACT Carotid Stent, Abbott Vascular) and the same distal embolic protection device (Emboshield NAV, Abbott Vascular) were employed. Results – At 12 months, no statistically significant difference was observed in overall survival rates (CEA 93.2% vs CAS 93.5%, p=0.967) and restenosis free survival rates (CEA 94.5% vs CAS 96.8%, p=0.662). An increased stroke free survival rate was observed in the CEA group when compared to the CAS group (CEA 100.0% vs CAS 93.5%, p=0.028). The age-based endpoints didn’t show any significant difference. Conclusion - These results suggest that CEA still remains the gold standard of treatment for carotid stenosis given its greater efficacy in the prevention of stroke CAS. However, CAS could be considered as an alternative treatment to CEA to be used in select cases only. |
URI: | http://www.translationalmedicine.unisa.it/index http://elea.unisa.it:8080/xmlui/handle/10556/4528 http://dx.doi.org/10.14273/unisa-2722 |
ISSN: | 2239-9747 |
È visualizzato nelle collezioni: | Translational Medicine @ UniSa. Volume 19 (jan.-jun. 2019) |
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10.pdf | Translational Medicine @ UniSa. Volume 19 (jan.- jun. 2019) | 452,73 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/apri |
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