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Management of patients with asymptomatic carotid stenosis may need to be individualized: a multidisciplinary call for action

Authors :
Niki Katsiki
Francesco Stilo
Christos D. Liapis
Ian M. Loftus
Mateja K Jezovnik
Hediyeh Baradaran
Rodolfo Pini
Gaetano Lanza
Sherif Sultan
Kosmas I. Paraskevas
Seemant Chaturvedi
Dimitri P. Mikhailidis
Tatjana Rundek
José Fernandes e Fernandes
Gianluca Faggioli
Andrew Nicolaides
Luca Saba
Francesco Spinelli
Ajay Gupta
M. Eline Kooi
Stavros K. Kakkos
Pavel Poredos
Clark J. Zeebregts
Hans-Henning Eckstein
Antoine Millon
Jean-Baptiste Ricco
Alun H. Davies
Paraskevas K.I.
Mikhailidis D.P.
Baradaran H.
Davies A.H.
Eckstein H.-H.
Faggioli G.
E Fernandes J.F.
Gupta A.
Jezovnik M.K.
Kakkos S.K.
Katsiki N.
Kooi M.E.
Lanza G.
Liapis C.D.
Loftus I.M.
Millon A.
Nicolaides A.N.
Poredos P.
Pini R.
Ricco J.-B.
Rundek T.
Saba L.
Spinelli F.
Stilo F.
Sultan S.
Zeebregts C.J.
Chaturvedi S.
Source :
Journal of Stroke, Vol 23, Iss 2, Pp 202-212 (2021), Journal of Stroke
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Korean Stroke Society, 2021.

Abstract

The optimal management of patients with asymptomatic carotid stenosis (ACS) is the subject of extensive debate. According to the 2017 European Society for Vascular Surgery guidelines, carotid endarterectomy should (Class IIa; Level of Evidence: B) or carotid artery stenting may be considered (Class IIb; Level of Evidence: B) in the presence of one or more clinical/imaging characteristics that may be associated with an increased risk of late ipsilateral stroke (e.g., silent embolic infarcts on brain computed tomography/magnetic resonance imaging, progression in the severity of ACS, a history of contralateral transient ischemic attack/stroke, microemboli detection on transcranial Doppler, etc.), provided documented perioperative stroke/death rates are 5 years. Besides these clinical/imaging characteristics, there are additional individual, ethnic/racial or social factors that should probably be evaluated in the decision process regarding the optimal management of these patients, such as individual patient needs/patient choice, patient compliance with best medical treatment, patient sex, culture, race/ethnicity, age and comorbidities, as well as improvements in imaging/operative techniques/outcomes. The present multispecialty position paper will present the rationale why the management of patients with ACS may need to be individualized.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22876391
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Stroke, Vol 23, Iss 2, Pp 202-212 (2021), Journal of Stroke
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2b48041f737af32ac191e1c69067bb54