1 / 28

DWMRI In Carotid Artery Interventions

DWMRI In Carotid Artery Interventions. Dr Sumaira Macdonald MBChB (Comm.), FRCP, FRCR, PhD, EBIR Consultant Vascular Radiologist & Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle, UK. CX 2013. How Does The Microembolic Burden of CAS

marvin
Télécharger la présentation

DWMRI In Carotid Artery Interventions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DWMRI In Carotid Artery Interventions DrSumaira MacdonaldMBChB (Comm.), FRCP, FRCR, PhD, EBIR Consultant Vascular Radiologist & Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle, UK CX 2013

  2. How Does The Microembolic Burden of CAS (Assessed on DWI brain & TCD) Compare With “ The Gold Standard ”: CEA ?

  3. The Arch Is A Hostile Territory: CEA vs filter p = 0.001 CEA vs flow reversal p = 0.007 Flow reversal vs filter p = 0.053 N = 42 Gupta N et al. JVS. 2011;53:316-322

  4. FILTERS:

  5. Randomised Trials: Filter-Protected Vs. Unprotected CAS (Differences in microembolisation)

  6. Randomised Trial: MES on TCD Macdonald S et al Cerebrovasc Dis 2010;29:282-289.

  7. Randomised Trial - DWI Procedural new white lesions (new lesions at 1-3 hours plus 24 hours) Macdonald S et al Cerebrovasc Dis 2010;29:282-289.

  8. Randomised Trial (US): DWI Results Filter-Protected vs. Unprotected CAS Barbato J et al. JVS 2008;47:760-765

  9. Sample Size For An Adequately Powered DWI study “…120-140 patients would be needed...” Kastrup A et al. Incidence of New Brain Lesions After Carotid Stenting With And Without Cerebral Protection. Stroke 2006;37:2312-2316

  10. Relative Incidence DWMRI Lesions: CEA, Unprotected CAS & Filter - Protected Transfemoral CAS

  11. Systematic Review: 32 studies N = 1363 CAS (37% new lesion rate) p < O.O1 N = 754 CEA (10% new lesion rate) Multiple confounders….. Schnaudigel S et al Stroke 2008;39:1911-1919

  12. ICSS Primary Analysis CEA Vs. CAS in 1713 symptomatic patients ICSS Substudy: N = 231 New white lesions on DWI 62 of 124 (50%) transfemoral distal filter CAS 18 of 107 (17%) CEA (OR 5.21, 2.78-9.79; p < 0.0001) Lancet Neurol. 2010 Apr;9(4):353-62

  13. ICSS Substudy: N = 231 2/7 centres performed unprotected CAS * 5/7 centres performed filter-protected CAS *TransfemoralDistal - Filter Type EPD

  14. ICSS Substudy: N = 231 Lesion Volumes: Individual lesion volume significantly smaller for CAS vs. CEA (p < 0.001) Total lesion volume: Not significantly different (p = 0.18) Hensicke G et al Stroke 2013;44: 80 -86

  15. Influence of EPD Strategy On DWMRI Findings

  16. Proximal Protection 1: Randomized Trial: Filter- Protected Vs. MoMa

  17. Montorsi P et al. JACC 2011; 58: 1656-1663

  18. MO.MA Vs. Filters (DWMRI) p NS* *Insufficient power

  19. N = 62 Bijuklic K et al. JACC Epub 2012 Jan 19th

  20. PROXIMAL PROTECTION 2: Transcervical Access with High Flow Rate Flow Reversal (Silk Road Michi NPS)

  21. Michi System FAST-CAS

  22. PROOF DWI Sub Study • Baseline scan within 72 hours • Post-procedure scan within 12-48 hours • Submitted to core laboratory for blinded evaluation by two independent neuroradiologists

  23. 1 Lancet Neurol. 2010 Apr;9(4):353-62 2. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2012;59:1383-1389 3. JVS 2011;54:1317-1323 4. JVS 2012 ;56:1585-1590

  24. Clinical Relevance: Cognitive Function: A Dark Art ?

  25. N = 32 studies (25 CEA, 4 CAS) “ No consistent findings…” “ Assessment of cognition after carotid revascularisation is probably influenced by many confounding factors such as learning effect, type of test, type of patients, & control group ” De Rango P et al. Stroke 2008;39:3116 - 3127

  26. An ICSS Sub-Study: N = 177 patients recruited in two Dutch centres N = 140 Cognitive Function Assessment at baseline N = 120 Cognitive Function Assessment at 6/12 10 Domains including executive function Altinbas A et al Neurology 2011;77:1084 - 1090

  27. The Authors’ Conclusions: “ The findings support the assumptions that new brain lesions, as detected by DWI after CAS or CEA do not affect cognitive performance in a manner that is long-lasting or clinically relevant ” “ Despite the higher embolic load detected by DWI, CAS is not associated with greater cognitive decline than CEA ”

More Related