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Prognostic Impact of Asymptomatic Carotid Artery Stenosis in Patients Undergoing Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting

Authors :
Francesco Onorati
Ilaria Franzese
Tuomas Tauriainen
Vito G. Ruggieri
Magnus Dalén
Marco Zanobini
Giuseppe Faggian
Saverio Nardella
Daniel Reichart
Sidney Chocron
Riccardo Gherli
Giuseppe Santarpino
Giovanni Mariscalco
Ciro Bancone
Fausto Biancari
Antonino S. Rubino
Karl Bounader
Marisa De Feo
Andrea Perrotti
Giuseppe Gatti
Juhani Airaksinen
Daniele Maselli
Antonio Salsano
Stefano Rosato
Francesco Nicolini
Sorosh Khodabandeh
Matteo Saccocci
Theodor Fischlein
Santarpino, Giseppe
Nicolini, Francesco
De Feo, Marisa
Dalén, Magnu
Fischlein, Theodor
Perrotti, Andrea
Reichart, Daniel
Gatti, Giuseppe
Onorati, Francesco
Franzese, Ilaria
Faggian, Giuseppe
Bancone, Ciro
Chocron, Sideny
Khodabandeh, Sorosh
Rubino, Antonino S.
Maselli, Daniele
Nardella, Saverio
Gherli, Riccardo
Salsano, Antonio
Zanobini, Marco
Saccocci, Matteo
Bounader, Karl
Rosato, Stefano
Tauriainen, Tuoma
Mariscalco, Giovanni
Airaksinen, Juhani
Ruggieri, Vito G.
Biancari, Fausto
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
W.B. Saunders Ltd, 2018.

Abstract

Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic impact of untreated asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis (CS) in patients undergoing isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Methods: This was a post hoc analysis of data from a prospective multicentre observational study. Patients without history of stroke or transient ischaemic attack from the multicentre E-CABG registry who were screened for CS before isolated CABG were included. Results: Among 2813 patients screened by duplex ultrasound and who did not undergo carotid intervention for asymptomatic CS, 11.1% had a stenosis of 50–59%, 6.0% of 60–69%, 3.1% of 70–79%, 1.4% of 80–89%, 0.5% of 90–99%, and 1.1% had carotid occlusion. In the screened population post-operative stroke occurred in 25 patients (0.9%), with an incidence of 1.5% among patients with CS ≥ 50% (n = 649). Pre-operative screening had not found a relevant CS in 15 of 25 patients suffering stroke after CABG. Brain imaging identified cerebral ischaemic injury in 20 patients, which was bilateral in five patients (25%), ipsilateral to a CS ≥ 50% in six (30%), and ipsilateral to a CS ≥ 70% in three (15%). In univariable analysis, the severity of CS was associated with a significantly increased risk of stroke (CS < 50%, 0.7%; 50–59%, 1.0%; 60–69%, 0.6%; 70–79%, 1.2%; 80–89%, 5.1%; 90–99%, 7.7%; occluded, 6.7%, p < .001). In multivariable analysis, a CS of 90–99% (OR 12.03, 95% CI 1.34–108.23) and the presence of an occluded internal carotid artery (OR 8.783, 95% CI 1.820–42.40) were independent predictors of stroke along with urgency of the procedure, severe massive bleeding according to the E-CABG classification, and the presence of a porcelain ascending aorta. Conclusions: Among screened patients with untreated asymptomatic patients, CS ≥ 90% was an independent predictor of post-operative stroke. As this condition has a low prevalence and when left untreated is associated with a relatively low rate of stroke, pre-operative screening of asymptomatic CS before CABG may not be justified. Clinical Trial registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02319083.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06383aa8de9f1c11b9d388f81a30eb1f