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An international, multispecialty, expert-based Delphi Consensus document on controversial issues in the management of patients with asymptomatic and symptomatic carotid stenosis.

Authors :
Paraskevas KI
Mikhailidis DP
Ringleb PA
Brown MM
Dardik A
Poredos P
Gray WA
Nicolaides AN
Lal BK
Mansilha A
Antignani PL
de Borst GJ
Cambria RP
Loftus IM
Lavie CJ
Blinc A
Lyden SP
Matsumura JS
Jezovnik MK
Bacharach JM
Meschia JF
Clair DG
Zeebregts CJ
Lanza G
Capoccia L
Spinelli F
Liapis CD
Jawien A
Parikh SA
Svetlikov A
Menyhei G
Davies AH
Musialek P
Roubin G
Stilo F
Sultan S
Proczka RM
Faggioli G
Geroulakos G
Fernandes E Fernandes J
Ricco JB
Saba L
Secemsky EA
Pini R
Myrcha P
Rundek T
Martinelli O
Kakkos SK
Sachar R
Goudot G
Schlachetzki F
Lavenson GS Jr
Ricci S
Topakian R
Millon A
Di Lazzaro V
Silvestrini M
Chaturvedi S
Eckstein HH
Gloviczki P
White CJ
Source :
Journal of vascular surgery [J Vasc Surg] 2024 Feb; Vol. 79 (2), pp. 420-435.e1. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Nov 07.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: Despite the publication of various national/international guidelines, several questions concerning the management of patients with asymptomatic (AsxCS) and symptomatic (SxCS) carotid stenosis remain unanswered. The aim of this international, multi-specialty, expert-based Delphi Consensus document was to address these issues to help clinicians make decisions when guidelines are unclear.<br />Methods: Fourteen controversial topics were identified. A three-round Delphi Consensus process was performed including 61 experts. The aim of Round 1 was to investigate the differing views and opinions regarding these unresolved topics. In Round 2, clarifications were asked from each participant. In Round 3, the questionnaire was resent to all participants for their final vote. Consensus was reached when ≥75% of experts agreed on a specific response.<br />Results: Most experts agreed that: (1) the current periprocedural/in-hospital stroke/death thresholds for performing a carotid intervention should be lowered from 6% to 4% in patients with SxCS and from 3% to 2% in patients with AsxCS; (2) the time threshold for a patient being considered "recently symptomatic" should be reduced from the current definition of "6 months" to 3 months or less; (3) 80% to 99% AsxCS carries a higher risk of stroke compared with 60% to 79% AsxCS; (4) factors beyond the grade of stenosis and symptoms should be added to the indications for revascularization in AsxCS patients (eg, plaque features of vulnerability and silent infarctions on brain computed tomography scans); and (5) shunting should be used selectively, rather than always or never. Consensus could not be reached on the remaining topics due to conflicting, inadequate, or controversial evidence.<br />Conclusions: The present international, multi-specialty expert-based Delphi Consensus document attempted to provide responses to several unanswered/unresolved issues. However, consensus could not be achieved on some topics, highlighting areas requiring future research.<br />Competing Interests: Disclosures D.P.M. has given talks, acted as a consultant or attended conferences sponsored by Amgen and Novo Nordisk. J.F.M. receives funding from the United States National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke for work related to running the CREST-2 clinical trial (U01NS080168) and the CREST-2 Long-term Observational Extension study (U01NS119169). E.A.S. has received research grants from the United States Food and Drug Administration, BD, Boston Scientific, Cook, CSI, Laminate Medical, Medtronic and Philips; has received consulting/speaking fees from Abbott, Bayer, BD, Boston Scientific, Cook, Cordis, CSI, Inari, Infraredx, Medtronic, Philips, Shockwave and VentureMed. H.-H.E. is a local Principal Investigator for the ROADSTER 2 trial and a scientific committee member of SPACE-1, SPACE-2 and ACST-2. T.R. is funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R01 MD012467, R01 NS029993, R01NS040807, 1U24NS107267), and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (UL1 TR002736, KL2 TR002737). J.S.M. has received institutional research grants from Abbott, Cook, Endologix, Gore and Medtronic.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-6809
Volume :
79
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of vascular surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37944771
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvs.2023.09.031