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Topics to cover. Treatment of carotid stenosisTreatment of PFONotMedical managementAF management. Ischaemic stroke. Atherothromboembolism 50%Small vessel disease 25
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1. Interventions for Stroke prevention When, who, what?
2. Topics to cover Treatment of carotid stenosis
Treatment of PFO
Not
Medical management
AF management
3. Ischaemic stroke Atherothromboembolism 50%
Small vessel disease 25%
Cardioembolism 20%
Other rarities 5% Atheroma and its complications are the most common cause of TIA and infarction. Small vessel disease within the brain about 25% of the total, and embolism from the heart another 20%. The rest are caused by rarer arterial disorders (eg arterial dissection) and blood disorders (eg sickle cell disease). Atheroma and its complications are the most common cause of TIA and infarction. Small vessel disease within the brain about 25% of the total, and embolism from the heart another 20%. The rest are caused by rarer arterial disorders (eg arterial dissection) and blood disorders (eg sickle cell disease).
4. Carotid stenosis is major cause of CVA
Recent symptoms
28% 2-year risk CVA
carotid stenosis >80%
0.3-2.4% of population
Beneficial effect of carotid endarterectomy in symptomatic patients with high-grade carotid stenosis. North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial Collaborators. N Engl J Med 1991 Aug 15;325(7):445-453 Beneficial effect of carotid endarterectomy in symptomatic patients with high-grade carotid stenosis. North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial Collaborators. N Engl J Med 1991 Aug 15;325(7):445-453
5. Who to treat? Symptomatic carotid stenosis
Asymptomatic carotid stenosis
Pre CABG
6. Pre-requisites for success Prove surgery is better than tablets
Prove percutaneous approach is almost as good as surgery
Add stents/adjunctive therapy to make percutaneous BETTER THAN surgery
7. Eastcott/ Debakey 1953 CEA
Symptomatic
NASCET (659)
>70% stenosis
2-yr fu CVA 9% vs 26% on medical Rx
ECST (3024)
>60% stenosis
3-yr fu CVA 14.9% vs 26.5% on medical Rx
Asymptomatic
ACAS
>60% stenosis
5-yr fu CVA 5.1% vs 11% on medical Rx
ASCT
>80% stenosis
5 year fu CVA
8. How severe a stenosis? Asymptomatic
>80%
Symptomatic
>70% on angio
Possibly lower (US 50%)
10. Quantify the risk of the procedure Asymptomatic stenosis
60% stenosis
Medical Rx CVA/death 2.2% 1 year
CEA CVA/death 3% 30 day
>80%
Medical Rx CVA/death 5.5% 1 year
CEA CVA/death 4.6% 30 day
11. Choose your surgeon Stroke/death <3% in asymptomatic patients
Does it regularly
CEA is a great operation
BUT…………..
12. recurrent hemisspheric TIA;high grade ICA stenosis
13. Prove percutaneous approach is almost as good as surgery CAVATAS
Randomisation 1992-1997
560 pts
504 PTA vs surgery
86% stenosis
Only 55 stents used
One CVA at time of stent.
14. CAVATAS 3 year death/CVA or CVA ipsilateral –no difference
Restenosis did not lead to changed outcome, but short FU.3 year death/CVA or CVA ipsilateral –no difference
Restenosis did not lead to changed outcome, but short FU.
15. World wide CAS
18. Why have a stent program? CEA tricky
Restenosis
Not C2-C7
Hostile neck
RT
Surgery
Scars
High risk
Medical Morbidity
Neuro Morbidity
RLN palsy contralat CAS
Minimally Invasive
No scar
No GA Easy
Equivalent
Treatment of occlusion post CEA
19. The real life data CEA (VSSGBI)
Mortality 1.3%
LOS 3.9d
Death/Stroke risk 3%
CAS (World registry)
Mortality 1%
LOS 1.8d
Death/Stroke risk 3%
Death/stroke risk
1.8-2.8%
20. Sapphire Trial
21. Results at 30 days
22. Sapphire trial 1 year data
23. Choose your procedure?
24. Flanders study
26. And Now~? German trial
French Trial
Doubt about safety of CAS
31. Meta-analysis
32. Endovascular vs Surgical treatment of Carotid Stenosis:Any Stroke or Death at 30 days – Random effects method
33. Numbers of patients included in the meta-analysis of Symptomatic Carotid Surgery Trials P Rothwell et al. Lancet 2003;361:107-116 Carotid surgery versus medical care
Outcomes: 3202 strokes & deaths
J Ederle at al. Cochrane Review in prep.Carotid surgery vs Endovascular treatment
Safety outcomes: 210 strokes & deaths
34. CAVATAS Intention to treat analysis Carotids fit for surgery (n=504) Events within 30 days of treatment Event Endovascular Surgical treatment treatment
All strokes*/death 10.0% 9.9% NS
* More than 7 days duration
Myocardial infarction 0% 0.8% NS
Cranial nerve palsy 0% 8.7% <0.0001
Haematoma† 1.2% 6.7% <0.002
†requiring surgery or prolonging stay
35. Endovascular vs Surgical treatment of Carotid Stenosis: Any Stroke, Cranial Neuropathy or Death at 30 days
36. Endovascular vs Surgical treatment of Carotid Stenosis:Disabling Stroke or Death at 30 days
37. Conclusion The carotid is 25 years behind the coronary
It is catching up fast.
Different vessel and vascular bed (cf diabetes)
The multidisciplinary team
We have a program up and running
38. The present Symptomatic carotid stenosis >70% (?50%)
CEA or CAS
High risk, then CAS
Get it done within 3 weeks
Asymptomatic carotid stenosis >80%
CEA or CAS
High risk, then should you be doing it at all?
Pre CABG
Do one side if bilateral stenosis
CAS would be a good choice
39. Should we close holes in the heart?
40. Cardiac Sources of Stroke 20% of neurological events may be cardiac
40% of neurological events are cryptogenic
? Are these often cardiac?
Rheumatic heart disease
AF
Cardiomyopathy (clot)
Aortic atheroma
Patent Foramen Ovale
41. Other investigations History suggestive of arrthymia, syncope, cardiac cause, cardio-embolic cause
12 lead ECG series , may identify PAF
Look for postural hypotension
24 hour tape
Echo (TTE)
42. Who to investigate for PFO? Class I
Any age visceral or peripheral embolism
<45 CVA
>45 CVA without risk factors for CVD
Any age if decision re anticoagulation may change
Class IIa
Any age CVA with possible embolic cause
43. What do we need to know? How do we diagnose it?
Is there a risk associated with PFO?
Will the risk be reduced by medical therapy?
Will the risk be reduced by closure?
Is closure safe?
44. Incidence Autopsy study: n=965
PFO 27%
34% <30 20% >80
3.4mm 5.8mm
Echocardiographic surveillance studies
PFO 8% (2-23%)
ASA 7.1% (3-12%)
MVP 8.9% (5-9%)
45. Diagnosis TransCranial Doppler 86%
Transthoracic Echo and contrast >90%
TOE and contrast >90%
Two modalities are better than one
50. The risk of PFO and stroke Lechat et al age<55 CVA
Control PFO 10%
All CVA PFO 40% (p<0.001)
Cryptogenic PFO 54%
Mas et al age 18-35 CVA
All CVA PFO 36%
Lechat n=60Lechat n=60
51. Meta-analysis CVA <55 9 studies
PFO OR 3.1 (2.3-4.2)
ASA OR 6.1 (2.5-15)
Both OR 15.6 (2.8-86)
52. What do we need to know? How do we diagnose it? +
Is there a risk associated with PFO? +
Will the risk be reduced by medical therapy?
Will the risk be reduced by closure?
Is closure safe?
53. Mechanism? Paradoxical embolism?
Larger hole found in CVA pts vs non-CVA
Residual shunt after closure predicts recurrence
Divers brains and PFO
In situ clot in tract?
Predict atrial arrhythmias? (OR 4.1)
Predict a hypercoagulable state?
54. Medical Therapy What?
Aspirin or Warfarin
Comess et al n=33 16% pa
No Rx
Mas et al n=132 3.4% pa
Aspirin or warfarin
Lausanne registry 3.8% pa
Aspirin or warfarin
55. Device closure Meier et al
CVA/TIA
6.6% pa No Closure
4.5% pa Closure
Stroke risk
3% No Closure
0% Closure
RCT awaited
56. What do we need to know? How do we diagnose it? +
Is there a risk associated with PFO? +
Will the risk be reduced by medical therapy? +
Will the risk be reduced by closure? ?
Is closure safe?
59. Who to investigate? Class I
Any age visceral or peripheral embolism
<45 CVA
>45 CVA without risk factors for CVD
Any age if decision re anticoagulation may change
Class IIa
Any age CVA with possible embolic cause
60. Problems Failure to deploy <5%
Device embolisation 1%
Thrombus 1-5%
Death 0%
I quote 1% risk from procedure
61. What do we need to know? How do we diagnose it? +
Is there a risk associated with PFO? +
Will the risk be reduced by medical therapy? +
Will the risk be reduced by closure? ?
Is closure safe? +
62. Who to Close? None?
All?
I like balanceI like balance
63. Conclusion
Closure may well reduce the risk of recurrence and should be considered within 3 months
Divers and those with Migraine deserve special consideration also
64. Conclusions Investigation and treatment essential
Strokes time as a “cinderella” is over
Worthwhile interventions are available (at a price)
These are worthless without stopping smoking, lipids, BP control etc.
66. Case 1 59 year old
Loss of speech and weakness in right hand for 1 hour
No HT/DM/smoking/FH/Lipids/Renal
No cardiac symptoms
MRI confirms stroke
Carotids OK
67. Case 1 Needs cardiac work-up to exclude
PAF
LAA clot
PFO
PFO found with large shunt.
Close it?
68. Case 2 52 year old
One clinical episode of weakness in L arm
No risk factors
MRI shows 5 areas of infarction of similar age on left side
Carotids OK bilaterally
69. Case 2 Needs investigation for:
PAF
LAA clot
PFO
PFO found
Should close this!
70. Case 3 68 yr old
Asian/HT/DM/IHD with CABG
Recurrent TIAs with left sided weakness
Carotids bilateral >80% stenosis
72. Case 3 Need to exclude PFO, PAF?
Need to treat R carotid urgently
CEA
CAS