Safety of endovascular therapy for symptomatic intracranial artery stenosis: a national prospective registry

Author:

Wang Yabing,Wang Tao,Dmytriw Adam AndrewORCID,Yang Kun,Jiao LiqunORCID,Shi Huaizhang,Lu Jie,Li TianxiaoORCID,Huang Yujie,Zhao Zhenwei,Wu Wei,Wan Jieqing,Sun Qinjian,Hong Bo,Li Yongli,Zhang Liyong,Chu Jianfeng,Cheng Qiong,Cai Yiling,Wang Pengfei,Luo Qi,Yang Hua,Dong Baijing,Zhang Yang,Zhao Jun,Chen Zuoquan,Li Wei,Bai Xiaoxin,He Weiwen,Cai Xueli,Ti Maimai,Zaidat Osama O

Abstract

IntroductionThe safety outcomes of endovascular therapy for intracranial artery stenosis in a real-world stetting are largely unknown. The Clinical Registration Trial of Intracranial Stenting for Patients with Symptomatic Intracranial Artery Stenosis (CRTICAS) was a prospective, multicentre, real-world registry designed to assess these outcomes and the impact of centre experience.Methods1140 severe, symptomatic intracranial arterial stenosis (ICAS) patients treated with endovascular therapy were included from 26 centres, further divided into three groups according to the annual centre volume of intracranial angioplasty and stent placement procedures over 2 years: (1) high volume for ≥25 cases/year; (2) moderate volume for 10–25 cases/year and (3) low volume for <10 cases/year.ResultsThe rate of 30-day stroke, transient ischaemic attack or death was 9.7% (111), with 5.4%, 21.1% and 9.7% in high-volume, moderate-volume and low-volume centres, respectively (p<0.05). Multivariable logistic regression confirmed high-volume centres had a significantly lower primary endpoint compared with moderate-volume centres (OR=0.187, 95% CI: 0.056 to 0.627; p≤0.0001), while moderate-volume and low-volume centres showed no significant difference (p=0.8456).ConclusionCompared with the preceding randomised controlled trials, this real-world, prospective, multicentre registry shows a lower complication rate of endovascular treatment for symptomatic ICAS. Non-uniform utilisation in endovascular technology, institutional experience and patient selection in different volumes of centres may have an impact on overall safety of this treatment.

Funder

the National Key Research and Development Project

the Beijing Scientific and Technologic Project

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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