Prevention of disabling and fatal strokes by successful carotid endarterectomy in patients without recent neurological symptoms: Randomised controlled trial

MRC Asymptomatic Carotid Surgery Trial (ACST) Collaborative Group

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2217 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background Among patients with substantial carotid artery narrowing but no recent neurological symptom (stroke or transient ischaemia), the balance of surgical risks and longterm benefits from carotid endarterectomy (CEA) was unclear. Methods During 1993-2003, 3120 asymptomatic patients with substantial carotid narrowing were randomised equally between immediate CEA (half got CEA by 1 month, 88% by 1 year) and indefinite deferral of any CEA (only 4% per year got CEA) and were followed for up to 5 years (mean 3·4 years). Kaplan-Meier analyses of 5-year risks are by allocated treatment. Findings The risk of stroke or death within 30 days of CEA was 3·1% (95% CI 2·3-4·1). Comparing all patients allocated immediate CEA versus all allocated deferral, but excluding such perioperative events, the 5-year stroke risks were 3·8% versus 11% (gain 7·2% [95% CI 5·0-9·4], p<0·0001). This gain chiefly involved carotid territory ischaemic strokes (2·7% vs 9·5%; gain 6·8% [4·8-8·8], p<0·0001), of which half were disabling or fatal (1·6% vs 5·3%; gain 3·7% [2·1-5·2], p<0·0001), as were half the perioperative strokes. Combining the perioperative events and the non-perioperative strokes, net 5-year risks were 6·4% versus 11·8% for all strokes (net gain 5·4% [3·0-7·8], p<0·0001), 3·5% versus 6·1% for fatal or disabling strokes (net gain 2·5% [0·8-4·3], p=0·004), and 2·1% versus 4·2% just for fatal strokes (net gain 2·1% [0·6-3·6], p=0·006). Subgroup-specific analyses found no significant heterogeneity in the perioperative hazards or (apart from the importance of cholesterol) in the long-term postoperative benefits. These benefits were separately significant for males and females; for those with about 70%, 80%, and 90% carotid artery narrowing on ultrasound; and for those younger than 65 and 65-74 years of age (though not for older patients, half of whom die within 5 years from unrelated causes). Full compliance with allocation to immediate CEA or deferral would, in expectation, have produced slightly bigger differences in the numbers operated on, and hence in the net 5-year benefits. The 10-year benefits are not yet known. Interpretation In asymptomatic patients younger than 75 years of age with carotid diameter reduction about 70% or more on ultrasound (many of whom were on aspirin, antihypertensive, and, in recent years, statin therapy), immediate CEA halved the net 5-year stroke risk from about 12% to about 6% (including the 3% perioperative hazard). Half this 5-year benefit involved disabling or fatal strokes. But, outside trials, inappropriate selection of patients or poor surgery could obviate such benefits.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1491-1502
Number of pages12
JournalThe Lancet
Volume363
Issue number9420
DOIs
StatePublished - 8 May 2004

Funding

FundersFunder number
University of Oxford Clinical Trial Service Unit
Medical Research Council
Stroke Association

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