Background: Carotid artery stenting is emerging as an alternative to surgical endarterectomy for the treatment of extracranial carotid artery disease. However, few data are available on the long-term clinical efficacy of carotid artery stenting and on the incidence of restenosis.
Methods: Stent implantation with the routine use of cerebral protection devices was attempted in a single center experience including 100 consecutive patients (104 lesions) with significant stenosis of the internal carotid artery (mean stenosis 82.8 +/- 9%). The mean age of the patients was 70.8 +/- 14 years, 27 lesions were symptomatic (26.0%) with a lesion related to a previous stroke or transient ischemic attack.
Results: Procedural success was achieved in 103 lesions (99%) and the cerebral protection was successfully applied in 102 procedures (98%). The 30-day incidence of stroke and death was 4% (4 patients). Complications consisted of one major stroke (1%) with persistent ipsilateral amaurosis, two minor strokes (2%), and one (1%) fatal myocardial infarction occurring 4 days after the stent procedure. During follow-up (minimum 24 months; mean 31 +/- 6 months) no further neurological events occurred, 6 patients died of non-neurological causes (6%) and 2 (2%) presented with a non-fatal myocardial infarction. Echo color Doppler scan control (minimum 24 months) was carried out in all surviving patients showing a restenosis classified as moderate (50-69%) in 2 cases and as critical (> or = 70%) in another 2 cases (1.8%). Both critical restenotic lesions were successfully treated by repeating balloon angioplasty.
Conclusions: The present study demonstrates that carotid artery stenting with routine cerebral protection can be performed with an acceptable procedural complication rate. At the 2-year follow-up carotid artery stenting appeared effective in stroke prevention and durable with a low incidence of restenosis.