AI Article Synopsis

  • Angioplasty and stenting are becoming popular treatments for intracranial stenoses, highlighting the need to assess their immediate and long-term outcomes based on literature from 1998 to 2008.
  • Analysis of 31 studies involving 1,177 procedures showed high technical success rates (median: 96%), but the risk of periprocedural complications such as stroke and death ranged widely, with a median complication rate of 7.7%.
  • Despite the feasibility of the procedure, the review emphasizes concerns about high rates of restenosis and the variable incidence of adverse events, suggesting that current widespread use in non-expert settings may not be warranted without further evidence from randomized trials.

Article Abstract

Background And Purpose: Angioplasty and stenting is increasingly being used for the treatment of intracranial stenoses. Based on a literature search (01/1998 to 04/2008) we sought to determine the immediate and long-term outcomes, as well as the durability of this procedure.

Summary Of Review: We identified 31 studies dealing with 1177 procedures, which had mainly been performed in patients with a symptomatic (98%) intracranial high-grade stenosis (mean: 78+/-7%) at high technical success rates (median: 96%; interquartile range [IQR]: 90% to 100%). The periprocedural minor or major stroke and death rates ranged from 0% to 50% with a median of 7.7% (IQR: 4.4% to 14.3%). Periprocedural complications were significantly higher in the posterior versus the anterior circulation (12.1%, versus 6.6%, P<0.01, odds ratio [OR]: 1.94, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.21 to 3.10), but did not differ between patients treated with a balloon-mounted (n=906) versus those who had been treated with a self-expandable stent (n=271; 9.5% versus 7.7%, P=0.47, OR: 1.15, CI:0.76 to 2.05). Restenosis >50% occurred more frequently after the use of a self-expandable stent (16/92; 17.4%, mean follow-up time: 5.4 months) than a balloon-mounted stent (61/443; 13.8%, mean follow-up time: 8.7 months; P<0.001, log-rank test).

Conclusions: Although intracranial stenting appears to be feasible, adverse events vary widely. Against the background of the results of this review yielding a high rate of restenoses and no clear impact of new stent devices on outcome, the widespread application of intracranial stenting outside the setting of randomized trials and in inexperienced centers currently does not seem to be justified.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.532713DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

follow-up time
8
time months
8
systematic review
4
review outcome
4
outcome stenting
4
stenting intracranial
4
intracranial atherosclerosis
4
atherosclerosis background
4
background purpose
4
purpose angioplasty
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!