Randomized Trial of Stent versus Surgery for Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis
Massachusetts General Hospital · University of Wisconsin–Madison · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Previous clinical trials have suggested that carotid-artery stenting with a device to capture and remove emboli ("embolic protection") is an effective alternative to carotid endarterectomy in patients at average or high risk for surgical complications.
In this trial, we compared carotid-artery stenting with embolic protection and carotid endarterectomy in patients 79 years of age or younger who had severe carotid stenosis and were asymptomatic (i.e., had not had a stroke, transient ischemic attack, or amaurosis fugax in the 180 days before enrollment) and were not considered to be at high risk for surgical complications. The trial was designed to enroll 1658 patients but was halted early, after 1453 patients underwent randomization, because of slow enrollment. Patients were followed for up to 5 years. The primary composite end point of death, stroke, or myocardial infarction within 30 days after the procedure or ipsilateral stroke within 1 year was tested at a noninferiority margin of 3 percentage points.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 65.55
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Amaurosis fugax
- Carotid endarterectomy
- Carotid stenting
- Stroke (engine)
- Stenosis
- Endarterectomy
- Asymptomatic