Long-term prognosis and effect of endarterectomy in patients with symptomatic severe carotid stenosis and contralateral carotid stenosis or occlusion: results from NASCET. North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET) Group.

The purpose of this study was to examine how the prognosis of patients who presented with a recent ischemic event referable to a 70% to 99% stenosis of one carotid artery (ipsilateral) was altered by stenosis and occlusion of the contralateral carotid artery. The benefit of performing carotid endarterectomy on the recently symptomatic artery, in the presence of contralateral artery disease, was also examined. A total of 659 patients were grouped into one of three categories according to the extent of stenosis in the contralateral carotid artery: less than 70% (559 patients), 70% to 99% (57 patients), and occlusion (43 patients). Strokes that occurred during the follow-up period were designated as ipsilateral if they arose from the same carotid artery as the symptom for which the patient had been entered into the study. Medically treated patients with an occluded contralateral artery were more than twice as likely to have had an ipsilateral stroke at 2 years than patients with either severe (hazard ratio: 2.36; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.00-5.62) or mild-to-moderate (hazard ratio: 2.65; 95% CI: 1.43-4.90) contralateral artery stenosis. The perioperative risk of stroke and death was higher in patients with an occluded contralateral artery (4.0% risk) or mild-to-moderate (5.1% risk) contralateral stenosis. Regression analyses indicated that the results were not affected by other risk factors. An occluded contralateral carotid artery significantly increased the risk of stroke associated with a severely stenosed ipsilateral carotid artery. Despite higher perioperative morbidity in the presence of an occluded contralateral artery, the longer-term outlook for patients who had endarterectomy performed on the recently symptomatic, severely stenosed ipsilateral carotid artery was considerably better than for medically treated patients.

[1]  H. Carton,et al.  Carotid Artery Surgery in the Presence of an Occlusion of the Contralateral Carotid Artery: Perioperative Risk Analysis and Follow-up , 1994, Cardiovascular surgery.

[2]  Allan J. Fox,et al.  Significance of Plaque Ulceration in Symptomatic Patients With High‐Grade Carotid Stenosis , 1994, Stroke.

[3]  S. Greenland,et al.  Simulation study of confounder-selection strategies. , 1993, American journal of epidemiology.

[4]  Carotid endarterectomy improves haemodynamics on the contralateral side: implications for operating contralateral to an occluded carotid artery , 1993, The British journal of surgery.

[5]  A. Fox,et al.  How to measure carotid stenosis. , 1993, Radiology.

[6]  G. Ferguson,et al.  Correlation of contralateral stenosis and intraoperative electroencephalogram change with risk of stroke during carotid endarterectomy. , 1993, Neurosurgery.

[7]  D. Sackett,et al.  Beneficial effect of carotid endarterectomy in symptomatic patients with high-grade carotid stenosis. , 1991, The New England journal of medicine.

[8]  L. Wilkins North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial. Methods, patient characteristics, and progress. , 1991, Stroke.

[9]  T. O'donnell,et al.  Carotid endarterectomy contralateral to an occluded carotid artery: perioperative risk and late results. , 1990, Journal of vascular surgery.

[10]  A. Bozzao,et al.  Early collateral blood supply and late parenchymal brain damage in patients with middle cerebral artery occlusion. , 1989, Stroke.

[11]  I. Saito,et al.  Middle cerebral artery occlusion: correlation of computed tomography and angiography with clinical outcome. , 1987, Stroke.

[12]  S. Friedman,et al.  Surgical therapy for the patient with internal carotid artery occlusion and contralateral stenosis. , 1987, Journal of Vascular Surgery.

[13]  Hammacher Er,et al.  Surgical treatment of patients with a carotid artery occlusion and a contralateral stenosis. , 1984 .

[14]  R. B. Smith,et al.  Does contralateral carotid occlusion influence neurologic fate of carotid endarterectomy? , 1984, Surgery.

[15]  D. Sumner,et al.  Influence of the contralateral carotid artery on neurologic complications following carotid endarterectomy. , 1984, Journal of vascular surgery.

[16]  N. Hertzer,et al.  Postoperative stroke and late neurologic complications after carotid endarterectomy. , 1981, Archives of surgery.

[17]  T. Riles,et al.  Carotid artery stenosis with contralateral internal carotid occlusion: long-term results in fifty-four patients. , 1980, Surgery.

[18]  R. M. Scott,et al.  Carotid endarterectomy in the presence of contralateral carotid occlusion: the role of EEG and intraluminal shunting. , 1979, Archives of surgery.

[19]  C. Andersen,et al.  Unilateral Internal Carotid Arterial Occlusion: Special Considerations , 1977, Stroke.

[20]  W. S. Fields,et al.  Joint Study of Extracranial Arterial Occlusion: X. Internal Carotid Artery Occlusion , 1976 .

[21]  R. Patterson Risk of carotid surgery with occlusion of the contralateral carotid artery. , 1974, Archives of neurology.

[22]  J. Allcock Occlusion of the middle cerebral artery: serial angiography as a guide to conservative therapy. , 1967, Journal of neurosurgery.