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Volume 46, Issue 3, Pages 460-466 (September 2007)


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Duplex scan surveillance after carotid angioplasty and stenting: A rational definition of stent stenosis

Presented at the Thirty-first Annual Meeting of the Southern Association for Vascular Surgery, Rio Grande, Puerto Rico, Jan 17-20, 2007.

Paul A. Armstrong, DOaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Dennis F. Bandyk, MDa, Brad L. Johnson, MDa, Murray L. Shames, MDa, Bruce R. Zwiebel, MDb, Martin R. Back, MDa

Received 14 January 2007; accepted 26 April 2007. published online 03 August 2007.

Objective

A duplex ultrasound (DUS) surveillance algorithm used after carotid endarterectomy (CEA) was applied to patients after carotid stenting and angioplasty (CAS) to determine the incidence of high-grade stent stenosis, its relationship to clinical symptoms, and the outcome of reintervention.

Methods

In 111 patients who underwent 114 CAS procedures for symptomatic (n = 62) or asymptomatic (n = 52) atherosclerotic or recurrent stenosis after CEA involving the internal carotid artery (ICA), DUS surveillance was performed ≤30 days and every 6 months thereafter. High-grade stenosis (peak systolic velocity [PSV] >300 cm/s, diastolic velocity >125 cm/s, internal carotid artery stent/proximal common carotid artery ratio >4) involving the stented arterial segment prompted diagnostic angiography and repair when >75% diameter-reduction stenosis was confirmed. Criteria for >50% CAS stenosis was a PSV >150 cm/s with a PSV stent ratio >2.

Results

All 114 carotid stents were patent on initial DUS imaging, including 90 (79%) with PSV <150 cm/s (94 ± 24 cm/s), 23 (20%) with PSV >150 cm/s (183 ± 34 cm/s), and one with high-grade, residual stenosis (PSV = 355). During subsequent surveillance, 81 CAS sites (71%) exhibited no change in stenosis severity, nine sites demonstrated stenosis regression to <50% diameter reduction, and five sites developed velocity spectra of a high-grade stenosis. Angiography confirmed >75% diameter reduction in all six CASs with DUS-detected high-grade stenosis, all patients were asymptomatic, and treatment consisted of endovascular (n = 5) or surgical (n = 1) repair. During the mean 33-month follow-up period, three patients experienced ipsilateral, reversible neurologic events at 30, 45, and 120 days after CAS; none was associated with severe stent stenosis. No stent occlusions occurred, and no patient with >50% CAS stenosis on initial or subsequent testing developed a permanent ipsilateral permanent neurologic deficit or stroke-related death.

Conclusion

DUS surveillance after CAS identified a 5% procedural failure rate due to the development of high-grade in-stent stenosis. Both progression and regression of stent stenosis severity was observed on serial testing, but 70% of CAS sites demonstrated velocity spectra consistent with <50% diameter reduction. The surveillance algorithm used, including reintervention for asymptomatic high-grade CAS stenosis, was associated with stent patency and the absence of disabling stroke.

a Division of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery, University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, Fla

b Radiology Associates of Tampa Bay, Tampa, Fla.

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Paul A. Armstrong, DO, University of South Florida, Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, 4 Columbia Dr, Ste 650, Tampa, FL 33606.

 Competition of interest: none.

PII: S0741-5214(07)00772-0

doi:10.1016/j.jvs.2007.04.073


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