TY - JOUR
T1 - Restenosis and risk of stroke after stenting or endarterectomy for symptomatic carotid stenosis in the International Carotid Stenting Study (ICSS)
T2 - secondary analysis of a randomised trial
AU - Bonati, Leo H.
AU - Gregson, John
AU - Dobson, Joanna
AU - McCabe, Dominick J.H.
AU - Nederkoorn, Paul J.
AU - van der Worp, H. Bart
AU - de Borst, Gert J.
AU - Richards, Toby
AU - Cleveland, Trevor
AU - Müller, Mandy D.
AU - Wolff, Thomas
AU - Engelter, Stefan T.
AU - Lyrer, Philippe A.
AU - Brown, Martin M.
AU - Algra, Ale
AU - Bakke, S. J.
AU - Baldwin, Neil
AU - Beard, Jonathan
AU - Bladin, Christopher
AU - Bland, J. Martin
AU - Boiten, J.
AU - Bosiers, Mark
AU - Bradbury, A. W.
AU - Canovas, David
AU - Chambers, Brian
AU - Chamorro, Angel
AU - Chataway, Jonathan
AU - Clifton, Andrew
AU - Collins, Rory
AU - Coward, Lucy
AU - Czlonkowska, Anna
AU - Davis, Stephen
AU - DeJaegher, L.
AU - Doig, David
AU - Dorman, Paul
AU - Ederle, Jörg
AU - Featherstone, Roland F.
AU - Ferro, Jose M.
AU - Gaines, Peter
AU - Gilling-Smith, G.
AU - Goertler, M.
AU - Gottsäter, A.
AU - Hacke, Werne
AU - Halliday, Alison
AU - Hamilton, George
AU - Hendriks, J. M.H.
AU - Hill, Michael
AU - Kapelle, L. Jaap
AU - Kool, L. J.S.
AU - van den Berg, J. S.P.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by grants from the UK Medical Research Council (MRC; G0300411), the Stroke Association, Sanofi-Synthélabo, and the European Union. MMB's Chair in Stroke Medicine is supported by the Reta Lila Weston Trust for Medical Research. Funding from the MRC was managed by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) on behalf of the MRC-NIHR partnership. LHB received grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation (PBBSB-116873, 33CM30-124119, 32003B-156658), the Swiss Heart Foundation, and the University of Basel, Switzerland. HBvdW was supported by a grant from the Dutch Heart Foundation (2010T075). STE has received research support from the Kaethe-Zingg-Schwichtenberg-Fonds of the Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences, the Swiss Heart Foundation, and Swiss National Science Foundation. PAL has received grants from the Swiss Heart Foundation, the University of Basel, and the Swiss National Science Foundation. DJHM received funding during this study from the Meath Foundation, the Vascular Neurology Research Foundation, IICN/Novartis Ireland Fellowship Grant, and the Irish Heart Foundation Stroke Prevention Bursary. This work was undertaken at University College Hospital at University College London, which received a proportion of funding from the Department of Health's NIHR Biomedical Research Centres funding scheme.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access Article under the CC BY license
PY - 2018/7/1
Y1 - 2018/7/1
N2 - Background: The risk of stroke associated with carotid artery restenosis after stenting or endarterectomy is unclear. We aimed to compare the long-term risk of restenosis after these treatments and to investigate if restenosis causes stroke in a secondary analysis of the International Carotid Stenting Study (ICSS). Methods: ICSS is a parallel-group randomised trial at 50 tertiary care centres in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. Patients aged 40 years or older with symptomatic carotid stenosis measuring 50% or more were randomly assigned either stenting or endarterectomy in a 1:1 ratio. Randomisation was computer-generated and done centrally, with allocation by telephone or fax, stratified by centre, and with minimisation for sex, age, side of stenosis, and occlusion of the contralateral carotid artery. Patients were followed up both clinically and with carotid duplex ultrasound at baseline, 30 days after treatment, 6 months after randomisation, then annually for up to 10 years. We included patients whose assigned treatment was completed and who had at least one ultrasound examination after treatment. Restenosis was defined as any narrowing of the treated artery measuring 50% or more (at least moderate) or 70% or more (severe), or occlusion of the artery. The degree of restenosis based on ultrasound velocities and clinical outcome events were adjudicated centrally; assessors were masked to treatment assignment. Restenosis was analysed using interval-censored models and its association with later ipsilateral stroke using Cox regression. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN25337470. This report presents a secondary analysis, and follow-up is complete. Findings: Between May, 2001, and October, 2008, 1713 patients were enrolled and randomly allocated treatment (855 were assigned stenting and 858 endarterectomy), of whom 1530 individuals were followed up with ultrasound (737 assigned stenting and 793 endarterectomy) for a median of 4·0 years (IQR 2·3–5·0). At least moderate restenosis (≥50%) occurred in 274 patients after stenting (cumulative 5-year risk 40·7%) and in 217 after endarterectomy (29·6%; unadjusted hazard ratio [HR] 1·43, 95% CI 1·21–1·72; p<0·0001). Patients with at least moderate restenosis (≥50%) had a higher risk of ipsilateral stroke than did individuals without restenosis in the overall patient population (HR 3·18, 95% CI 1·52–6·67; p=0·002) and in the endarterectomy group alone (5·75, 1·80–18·33; p=0·003), but no significant increase in stroke risk after restenosis was recorded in the stenting group (2·03, 0·77–5·37; p=0·154; p=0·10 for interaction with treatment). No difference was noted in the risk of severe restenosis (≥70%) or subsequent stroke between the two treatment groups. Interpretation: At least moderate (≥50%) restenosis occurred more frequently after stenting than after endarterectomy and increased the risk for ipsilateral stroke in the overall population. Whether the restenosis-mediated risk of stroke differs between stenting and endarterectomy requires further research. Funding: Medical Research Council, the Stroke Association, Sanofi-Synthélabo, and the European Union.
AB - Background: The risk of stroke associated with carotid artery restenosis after stenting or endarterectomy is unclear. We aimed to compare the long-term risk of restenosis after these treatments and to investigate if restenosis causes stroke in a secondary analysis of the International Carotid Stenting Study (ICSS). Methods: ICSS is a parallel-group randomised trial at 50 tertiary care centres in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. Patients aged 40 years or older with symptomatic carotid stenosis measuring 50% or more were randomly assigned either stenting or endarterectomy in a 1:1 ratio. Randomisation was computer-generated and done centrally, with allocation by telephone or fax, stratified by centre, and with minimisation for sex, age, side of stenosis, and occlusion of the contralateral carotid artery. Patients were followed up both clinically and with carotid duplex ultrasound at baseline, 30 days after treatment, 6 months after randomisation, then annually for up to 10 years. We included patients whose assigned treatment was completed and who had at least one ultrasound examination after treatment. Restenosis was defined as any narrowing of the treated artery measuring 50% or more (at least moderate) or 70% or more (severe), or occlusion of the artery. The degree of restenosis based on ultrasound velocities and clinical outcome events were adjudicated centrally; assessors were masked to treatment assignment. Restenosis was analysed using interval-censored models and its association with later ipsilateral stroke using Cox regression. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN25337470. This report presents a secondary analysis, and follow-up is complete. Findings: Between May, 2001, and October, 2008, 1713 patients were enrolled and randomly allocated treatment (855 were assigned stenting and 858 endarterectomy), of whom 1530 individuals were followed up with ultrasound (737 assigned stenting and 793 endarterectomy) for a median of 4·0 years (IQR 2·3–5·0). At least moderate restenosis (≥50%) occurred in 274 patients after stenting (cumulative 5-year risk 40·7%) and in 217 after endarterectomy (29·6%; unadjusted hazard ratio [HR] 1·43, 95% CI 1·21–1·72; p<0·0001). Patients with at least moderate restenosis (≥50%) had a higher risk of ipsilateral stroke than did individuals without restenosis in the overall patient population (HR 3·18, 95% CI 1·52–6·67; p=0·002) and in the endarterectomy group alone (5·75, 1·80–18·33; p=0·003), but no significant increase in stroke risk after restenosis was recorded in the stenting group (2·03, 0·77–5·37; p=0·154; p=0·10 for interaction with treatment). No difference was noted in the risk of severe restenosis (≥70%) or subsequent stroke between the two treatment groups. Interpretation: At least moderate (≥50%) restenosis occurred more frequently after stenting than after endarterectomy and increased the risk for ipsilateral stroke in the overall population. Whether the restenosis-mediated risk of stroke differs between stenting and endarterectomy requires further research. Funding: Medical Research Council, the Stroke Association, Sanofi-Synthélabo, and the European Union.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85048401548&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S1474-4422(18)30195-9
DO - 10.1016/S1474-4422(18)30195-9
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85048401548
SN - 1474-4422
VL - 17
SP - 587
EP - 596
JO - The Lancet Neurology
JF - The Lancet Neurology
IS - 7
ER -