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E-064 Carotid webs: a multimodality imaging study

Authors :
Aaron Anderson
Diogo C Haussen
Jonathan A Grossberg
Thomas P Madaelil
Clara M Barreira
Raul G Nogueira
Source :
Electronic Poster Abstracts.
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd., 2018.

Abstract

Purpose Carotid web is an intimal variant of fibromuscular dysplasia that has been associated with recurrent ischemic strokes in the young. The accuracy of different diagnostic tests is unknown. The objective of the present study is to evaluate the diagnostic performance of different imaging modalities for the detection of carotid webs. Methods Using an institutional neurovascular database, we retrospectively identified consecutive patients diagnosed with carotid web and internal carotid artery atherosclerosis. Multimodality imaging including at minimum neck CT angiography (CTA) at baseline plus either Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA) and/or carotid Ultrasound (US) was mandatory. CTA images were evaluated by two readers (neurointerventionist#1 and diagnostic neuroradiologist) in a consensus read for confirmation of diagnosis, and degree of stenosis based on NASCET criteria. DSA studies were evaluated by two blinded readers (neurointerventionists #2 and #3) to categorize the presence or absence of carotid web or atherosclerotic plaque in individual carotid arteries. US studies were evaluated by two blinded readers (two neurosonology-credentialed stroke neurologists) to characterize diagnosis (carotid web vs atherosclerosis vs normal), degree of certainty, and the degree of stenosis. In the setting of discrepancies, consensus read was obtained. The performance of DSA and of US was compared to CTA. Results Median age of the cohort was 57 years (IQR 46–61 years) with 36.4% (12/33) male gender. Overall comorbidities included 60.6% (20/33) hypertension, 33.3% (11/33) hyperlipidemia, 21.2% (7/33) diabetes mellitus, and 27.3% (9/33) smoking. Multimodal imaging was available for 33 carotid arteries. Twenty-eight carotids had CTA and DSA available for review. DSA readers identified correctly all normal vessels, but diagnosed carotid webs less frequently (43%, 12/28; DSA group vs 50%, 14/28; CTA group) and atherosclerosis more frequently (43%, 12/28; DSA group vs 36%, 10/28; CTA group) when compared to CTA. Inter-rater correlation for the two DSA readers (κ=0.86, p Conclusion CTA and DSA should be preferred imaging modalities to diagnose and characterize carotid webs. Disclosures T. Madaelil: None. R. Nogueira: None. J. Grossberg: None. A. Anderson: None. C. Barreira: None. D. Haussen: None.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Electronic Poster Abstracts
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9ac878f9a84fb2436be1014b094c83b8