Voeks Jenifer H, Howard George, Roubin Gary, Farb Richard, Heck Donald, Logan William, Longbottom Mary, Sheffet Alice, Meschia James F, Brott Thomas G
From the Department of Neurology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston (J.H.V.); Department of Biostatistics, University of Alabama at Birmingham (G.H.); Cardiovascular Associates of the Southeast, Birmingham, AL (G.R.); Division of Neuroradiology, Department of Medical Imaging, University of Toronto, Toronto Western Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (R.F.); Department of Radiology, Novant Health Forsyth Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC (D.H.); Mercy Clinic Neurology, Mercy Hospital, St. Louis, MO (W.L.); Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL (M.L., J.F.M., T.G.B.); and Department of Surgery, New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark (A.S., T.G.B.).
Stroke. 2015 Oct;46(10):2868-73. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.115.009516. Epub 2015 Sep 8.
There is higher combined risk of stroke or death (S+D) at older ages with carotid stenting. We assess whether this can be attributed to patient or arterial characteristics that are in the pathway between older age and higher risk.
Mediation analysis of selected patient (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and dyslipidemia) and arterial characteristics assessed at the clinical sites and the core laboratory (plaque length, eccentric plaque, ulcerated plaque, percent stenosis, peak systolic velocity, and location) was performed in 1123 carotid artery stenting-treated patients in the Carotid Revascularization Endarterectomy Versus Stenting Trial (CREST). We assessed the association of age with these characteristics, the association of these characteristics with stroke risk, and the amount of mediation of the association of age on the combined risk of periprocedural S+D with adjustment for these factors.
Only plaque length as measured at the sites increased with age, was associated with increased S+D risk and significantly mediated the association of age on S+D risk. However, adjustment for plaque length attenuated the increased risk per 10 years of age from 1.72 (95% confidence interval, 1.26-2.37) to 1.66 (95% confidence interval, 1.20-2.29), accounting for only 8% of the increased risk.
Plaque length seems to be in the pathway between older age and higher risk of S+D among carotid artery stenting-treated patients, but it mediated only 8% of the age effect excess risk of carotid artery stenting in CREST. Other factors and mechanisms underlying the age effect need to be identified as plaque length will not identify elderly patients for whom stenting is safe relative to endarterectomy.
URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00004732.
老年患者行颈动脉支架置入术时,发生卒中或死亡(S+D)的综合风险更高。我们评估这是否可归因于年龄增长与高风险之间路径上的患者或动脉特征。
在颈动脉血运重建内膜切除术与支架置入术试验(CREST)中,对1123例行颈动脉支架置入术治疗的患者进行了中介分析,这些患者的选定患者特征(高血压、糖尿病和血脂异常)以及在临床站点和核心实验室评估的动脉特征(斑块长度、偏心斑块、溃疡斑块、狭窄百分比、收缩期峰值流速和位置)。我们评估了年龄与这些特征的关联、这些特征与卒中风险的关联,以及在对这些因素进行调整后,年龄与围手术期S+D综合风险关联的中介量。
仅临床站点测量的斑块长度随年龄增加,与S+D风险增加相关,并显著介导了年龄与S+D风险的关联。然而,对斑块长度进行调整后,每增加10岁的风险增加从1.72(95%置信区间,1.26 - 2.37)降至1.66(95%置信区间,1.20 - 2.29),仅占风险增加的8%。
在接受颈动脉支架置入术治疗的患者中,斑块长度似乎处于年龄增长与S+D高风险之间的路径上,但在CREST研究中,它仅介导了颈动脉支架置入术年龄效应额外风险的8%。由于斑块长度无法识别相对于内膜切除术而言支架置入术安全的老年患者,因此需要确定年龄效应背后的其他因素和机制。