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Carotid Artery Stenting During Endovascular Treatment of Acute Stroke
Sponsor: University Medical Center Groningen
Summary
Rationale: Approximately 20% of the patients with acute ischemic stroke due to an intracranial large vessel occlusion (LVO) has a high-grade stenosis in the ipsilateral cervical carotid artery. It is uncertain whether immediate carotid artery stenting (CAS) of a cervical carotid artery stenosis during endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is beneficial. Immediate CAS could improve cerebral perfusion and prevent recurrent ischemic stroke but could also increase the chance of intracranial hemorrhagic complications due to hyperperfusion syndrome or to the required antiplatelet treatment to prevent stent occlusion. Moreover, some patients end up with a severe disabling stroke after EVT. In these patients carotid revascularization by carotid endarterectomy (CEA) or CAS would usually not be performed but these patients would be treated by medical management only. Objective: to assess the safety and efficacy of immediate cervical CAS during EVT in patients with acute ischemic stroke due to LVO with a high-grade stenosis \>50% or occlusion of the ipsilateral cervical carotid artery. Study design: prospective randomized open label controlled trial comparing immediate CAS during EVT versus EVT with deferred treatment of the cervical carotid artery lesion (deferred CAS/CEA or medical management alone). Outcome assessment will be blinded for treatment allocation.
Official title: Carotid Artery Stenting During Endovascular Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Randomized Multicenter Clinical Trial in Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke and Carotid Artery Stenosis Undergoing Endovascular Treatment
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
600
Start Date
2022-11-15
Completion Date
2026-11-15
Last Updated
2024-07-19
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
carotid artery stenting during EVT
Patients with an ipsilateral high grade carotid artery stenosis or occlusion of presumed atherosclerotic origin and an proximal intracranial large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation will be randomized using a web-based randomization tool to immediate carotid artery stenting or deferred treatment strategy of carotid artery stenosis. In the intervention group, the cervical carotid artery lesion will be treated with a stent during the EVT (just before or directly after intracranial thrombus removal), the control group will be treated according to the national guidelines with carotid endarterectomy of carotid artery stenting (for patients with non-disabling stroke) or medical management alone (for patients with severe disabling stroke).
no carotid artery stenting during EVT
A deferred treatment approach: carotid revascularization within two weeks after stroke onset or best medical management only, depending on the functional recovery of the patient.
Locations (1)
University Medical Center Groningen
Groningen, Netherlands