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A meta-analysis of the effect of stent design on clinical and radiologic outcomes of carotid artery stenting

Authors :
Peter L. Faries
E.-J. Vonken
Gert J. de Borst
H. Mudra
Giorgio Ventoruzzo
Michel Bosiers
M. Rasiova
Geert Maleux
Emiliano Chisci
Jos C. van den Berg
Hester M. den Ruijter
G. Parrilla
D Doig
Mark K. Eskandari
Gioele Simonte
Martin M. Brown
Paweł Latacz
S. Tanaskovic
Roland L Featherstone
Jeroen Wauters
M.W.K. Tietke
J. Ledwoch
M. Piazza
Leo H. Bonati
B. Fiorucci
F. Hernandez-Fernandez
T. Ohki
R. Nolz
K. Kono
D.K. Han
Carlo Setacci
L. Tekieli
K. Bijuklic
Joanna Dobson
Piotr Pieniazek
Joachim Schofer
Horst Sievert
Iris Q Grunwald
G de Donato
Marius Hornung
Armelle J.A. Meershoek
D. Radak
Evelien E. de Vries
A.L. Kühn
J. Giri
Source :
Journal of Vascular Surgery, 69(6), 1952. Mosby Inc.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Procedural characteristics, including stent design, may influence the outcome of carotid artery stenting (CAS). A thorough comparison of the effect of stent design on outcome of CAS is thus warranted to allow for optimal evidence-based clinical decision making. This study sought to evaluate the effect of stent design on clinical and radiologic outcomes of CAS. METHODS: A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane databases in May 2018. Included were articles reporting on the occurrence of clinical short- and intermediate-term major adverse events (MAEs; any stroke or death) or radiologic adverse events (new ischemic lesions on postprocedural magnetic resonance diffusion-weighted imaging [MR-DWI], restenosis, or stent fracture) in different stent designs used to treat carotid artery stenosis. Random effects models were used to calculate combined overall effect sizes. Metaregression was performed to identify the effect of specific stents on MAE rates. RESULTS: From 2654 unique identified articles, two randomized, controlled trials and 66 cohort studies were eligible for analysis (including 46,728 procedures). Short-term clinical MAE rates were similar for patients treated with open cell vs closed cell or hybrid stents. Use of an Acculink stent was associated with a higher risk of short-term MAE compared with a Wallstent (risk ratio [RR], 1.51; P = .03), as was true for use of Precise stent vs Xact stent (RR, 1.55; P < .001). Intermediate-term clinical MAE rates were similar for open vs closed cell stents. Use of open cell stents predisposed to a 25% higher chance (RR, 1.25; P = .03) of developing postprocedural new ischemic lesions on MR-DWI. No differences were observed in the incidence of restenosis, stent fracture, or intraprocedural hemodynamic depression with respect to different stent design. CONCLUSIONS: Stent design is not associated with short- or intermediate-term clinical MAE rates in patients undergoing CAS. Furthermore, the division in open and closed cell stent design might conceal true differences in single stent efficacy. Nevertheless, open cell stenting resulted in a significantly higher number of subclinical postprocedural new ischemic lesions detected on MR-DWI compared with closed cell stenting. An individualized patient data meta-analysis, including future studies with prospective homogenous study design, is required to adequately correct for known risk factors and to provide definite conclusions with respect to carotid stent design for specific subgroups.

Details

ISSN :
10976809 and 07415214
Volume :
69
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of vascular surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....98e987ca2e3a7cc4cb8b4dd54b0645af