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Advances in Interventional Cardiology/Postępy w Kardiologii Interwencyjnej
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Original paper

Clinical situations requiring radial or brachial access during carotid artery stenting

Damian R. Maciejewski
1
,
Łukasz Tekieli
1
,
Mariusz Trystuła
2
,
Tomasz Tomaszewski
3
,
Roman Machnik
2
,
Jacek Legutko
1
,
Marek Kazibudzki
2
,
Robert Musiał
4
,
Marcin Misztal
2, 5
,
Piotr Pieniążek
1, 2, 6

1.
Department of Interventional Cardiology, Institute of Cardiology, Medical College, Jagiellonian University, John Paul II Hospital, Krakow, Poland
2.
Department of Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Interventions, John Paul II Hospital, Krakow, Poland
3.
Department of Neurology and Stroke Unit, John Paul II Hospital, Krakow, Poland
4.
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, John Paul II Hospital, Krakow, Poland
5.
Department of Coronary Artery Disease and Heart Failure, Institute of Cardiology, Medical College, Jagiellonian University, John Paul II Hospital, Krakow, Poland
6.
Department of Cardiac and Vascular Diseases, Institute of Cardiology, Medical College, Jagiellonian University, John Paul II Hospital, Krakow, Poland
Adv Interv Cardiol 2020; 16, 4 (62): 410–417
Online publish date: 2020/12/29
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Summary

The femoral artery is the conventional approach for carotid artery stenting (CAS). However, in cases of anatomy variant of the aortic arch and supra-aortic vessels, significant peripheral artery disease or severe obesity, radial or brachial access may be preferred. We found that in these cases transradial and transbrachial CAS may be an effective and safe procedure, and it may constitute a viable alternative to the femoral approach.

Introduction

Carotid artery disease is one of the main causes of ischemic stroke and, as a consequence, severe disability in adults [1]. Percutaneous carotid artery stenting (CAS) has become a viable alternative for carotid endarterectomy, particularly in ageing populations with multiple comorbidities and high perioperative risk [2, 3].

The femoral artery is the conventional approach for CAS procedures. However, anatomical variants of the aortic arch and supra-aortic vessels or significant peripheral vascular disease can make catheterization of the common carotid artery difficult or even impossible [4]. In these cases with a challenging aortic arch, the transfemoral approach can lead to prolonged catheter manipulation increasing the perioperative risk of neurological ischemic complications. Furthermore, access site complications as well as contraindications for prolonged bed rest may necessitate an alternative access. Thus, the increasingly used transradial approach for coronary interventions has also been evaluated as an alternative strategy for carotid artery stenting. Carotid artery stenting via the radial/brachial artery is more demanding owing to the need for dedicated systems and techniques. Moreover, operator volume and learning curve are important determinants of technical success and periprocedural outcomes.

Aim

The aim of the study was to evaluate the clinical conditions indicating potential benefit from non-femoral access as well as feasibility and safety of TRA/TBA as an alternative approach for CAS.

Material and methods

From June 2013 among 2253 CAS procedures, 67 (3%) patients were selected to undergo TRA/TBA – CAS. The indications for the non-femoral approach were based on our own experiences and literature review [57]. The grade of carotid stenosis and anatomy of the aortic arch were determined by use of preoperative duplex ultrasonography (DUS) and/or computed tomographic angiography (CTA), and verified by intraoperative angiography. Carotid stenting was performed in asymptomatic patients who had carotid artery stenosis ≥ 70% by arteriography and in symptomatic patients (TIAs or strokes occurring within 6 months prior to CAS) with ≥ 50% stenosis, according to NASCET (North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial) criteria [8, 9]. All patients underwent examination by the site neurologist and all provided informed consent before any intervention. This study was approved by the Committee on Research Ethics at our hospital, in compliance with the ethical guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki. The patients had been treated protractedly with aspirin (75 mg/day) and prior to the procedure received a 300 mg loading dose of clopidogrel. After CAS the aspirin was maintained indefinitely and 75 mg/day of clopidogrel was continued for 3 months.

An Allen’s test was performed in each patient before the transradial approach. On the procedure day, the right radial or brachial artery was punctured and a 7 Fr Glidesheath Slender (Terumo) was introduced. After the artery cannulation, heparin was given to achieve an activated coagulation time of 250–300 s. Subsequently, Cobra I & II or Sidewinder diagnostic catheters (Terumo, Cordis) were used and in all cases over a 0.035-inch diagnostic wire a 7 Fr Guider Softip (Boston Scientific) guiding catheter was introduced to the common carotid artery. All CAS procedures were neuroprotected. Direct stenting was performed when possible. Before and after CAS, the degree of stenosis was calculated with quantitative angiography (Figure 1). Technical success was defined as successful revascularization with residual stenosis ≤ 30% by NASCET criteria. The primary endpoint was the composite of stroke, death and myocardial infarction within 30 days of the procedure. Technical failure was identified when the procedure was abandoned and the cause was noted.

Figure 1

A – Left internal carotid artery stenosis (large arrow). TBC – truncus brachiocephalicus and bovine arch (thin arrow). B – Selective angiography confirming critical stenosis of the left internal carotid artery. C – Self-expanding Carotid Wallstent (Boston Scientific) 7 mm × 30 mm delivery (white arrow). D – Ultra Soft (Boston Scientific) 5.0 mm × 20 mm balloon post-dilatation. E – Final angiography of carotid stenting

/f/fulltexts/PWKI/42701/PWKI-16-42701-g001_min.jpg

Among 1237 completed TFA CAS we performed propensity score matching with TRA/TBA CAS at a 1 : 1 ratio using the following variables: (i) age, (ii) sex, (iii) clinical presentation, (iv) comorbidities, (v) percentage of carotid artery stenosis, and (vi) contralateral carotid occlusion. Patients after contralateral CAS and re-CAS or procedures using proximal embolic protection devices were excluded from the TFA group.

Clinical (including neurological) examination and DUS were performed in all patients before the procedure, at discharge and at 30 days of follow-up.

Statistical analysis

Continuous data were presented as means ± standard deviation; categorical data were given as counts (percentages). Normality of distribution was assessed by the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. A propensity score matching technique was used to balance available baseline covariates. Fisher’ s exact test or χ2 test was used to analyze categorical variables and Student’ s t-test or Mann-Whitney U-test for continuous variables. A p-value of < 0.05 was considered as statistically significant. All analyses were evaluated in Statistica 9.0 (StatSoft Inc) or SPSS 23.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, Illinois, USA).

Results

The mean age of the treated patients (44 men) was 70 years (range: 51–88 years), and 28 (41.8%) patients were symptomatic (TIA or stroke occurring within 6 months prior to CAS). Transfemoral access was not feasible due to peripheral artery disease (PAD) in 35 (52.2%) patients – the most common causes were Leriche syndrome or history of aorto/femoro-femoral bypass implantation. The bovine arch (the left common carotid artery arises from brachiocephalic trunk) was the reason for a radial approach in 10 (14.9%) cases. Nine (13.4%) patients were disqualified from TFA CAS due to obesity with a body mass index over 35 and 7 (10.5%) due to severe degenerative disease of the spine (inability to undergo femoral arterial puncture and/or lie down during/after procedure). Moreover, type III aortic arch (all three supra-aortic vessels arise before and below the top of the aortic arch) were described in 5 (7.5%) cases. In 1 (1.5%) patient, CAS was performed via the radial artery due to excessive protrusion of the stent into the aortic arch after left subclavian artery stenting in the past (Figure 2). Brachial access was used in 3 cases due to an unsuccessful radial artery puncture attempt and in one case of radial artery occlusion. Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics, indication for CAS and propensity score matching with the TFA group are listed in Table I.

Figure 2

A – Excessive protrusion of subclavian stent into the aortic arch (black arrow). B – Successful cannulation of the right common carotid artery with 7 Fr Guider Softip (Boston Scientific) guiding catheter via the right radial artery. C – Selective angiography confirming critical stenosis of the right internal carotid artery. D – Self-expanding Precise (Cordis) 8 mm × 30 mm post-dilatation with 5.0 mm × 20 mm balloon. E – Final angiography showing optimal effect of RICA-CAS

/f/fulltexts/PWKI/42701/PWKI-16-42701-g002_min.jpg
Table I

Patient baseline characteristics and indications for radial/brachial access (n = 67). Propensity score matching between TRA/TBA and TFA CAS at 1 : 1 ratio

ParameterValue
Demography and comorbidities:
Age [years]70 ±8.6
Gender, men44 (65.7)
Stroke/TIA28 (41.8)
Hypertension66 (98.5)
Diabetes mellitus21 (31.3)
Dyslipidaemia66 (98.5)
Coronary artery disease43 (64.2)
Previous percutaneous intervention coronary24 (35.8)
Previous myocardial infarction16 (23.9)
History of coronary artery bypass grafting9 (13.4)
Indication for radial/brachial access:
Severe peripheral artery disease35 (52.2)
Bovine arch10 (14.9)
Obesity, BMI > 35 kg/m29 (13.4)
Severe degenerative disease of the spine7 (10.5)
Type III aortic arch5 (7.5)
Excessive protrusion of the subclavian stent into the aortic arch1 (1.5)
Propensity score matching
ParameterTRA/TBA (n = 63)TFA (n = 63)P-value
Age [years]69.8 ±8.769.2 ±8.60.687
Gender, men41 (65.1)43 (68.3)0.705
Stroke/TIA26 (41.3)25 (39.7)0.856
Diabetes mellitus19 (30.2)23 (36.5)0.450
Previous percutaneous intervention coronary23 (36.5)25 (39.7)0.714
Previous myocardial infarction15 (23.8)15 (23.8)1.000
History of coronary artery bypass grafting9 (14.3)8 (12.7)0.794
Contralateral carotid occlusion11 (17.5)10 (15.9)0.811
Percentage of carotid artery stenosis81.5 ±8.281.7 ±8.10.744

[i] Values are mean ± SD or n (%).

We were able to successfully complete the CAS procedure using transradial/transbrachial access in 63 of 67 patients (94% technical success rate). Procedural failure was due to unsuccessful distal embolic protection device delivery, massive carotid artery calcification and subclavian artery tortuosity in 2 cases. In 2 of these 4 patients the procedure was completed through a direct transcervical approach without complications (the puncture sites were closed with sutures). The other 2 patients were qualified for high-risk carotid endarterectomy (both were uneventful). The mean NASCET carotid artery stenosis was reduced from 81% to 9% (p < 0.001). Direct stent implantation was performed in 30 (47.6%) cases. Among 63 completed TRA/TBA CAS, technical success was achieved in 61 (97%) patients. In 2 patients 35–40% residual stenosis remained without peri- and postprocedural complications. Procedural data are shown in Table II.

Table II

Procedural data (n = 67)

ParameterValue
Right carotid artery39 (58.2%)
Left carotid artery28 (41.8%)
Contralateral occlusion11 (16.4%)
Technical success rate by radial/brachial access:63
Transradial access59
Transbrachial access4
Direct stenting30 (47.6%)
Angiographic stenosis evaluation (%):
Pre-intervention81.5 ±8.2
Post-intervention9.1 ±7.6
Stent type:
Carotid Wallstent (Boston Scientific)33 (52.3%)
Roadsaver (Terumo)18 (28.6%)
Cristallo Idealle (Medtronic)6 (9.5%)
Precise (Cordis)3 (4.8%)
Mer (Balton)3 (4.8%)
Neuroprotection type:
Spider FX (Medtronic)29 (46%)
FilterWire EZ (Boston Scientific)19 (30.2%)
Wirion (Allium Medical)9 (14.3%)
Emboshield (Abbott)6 (9.5%)

The composite endpoint occurred in 3 (4.8%) cases. These patients were disqualified from TFA CAS due to PAD, degenerative disease of the spine and severe obesity. One patient died as a result of an intracranial hemorrhage that occurred 2 days after the procedure. Two patients sustained a major ischemic stroke during the first postprocedural day. Both subsequently improved substantially over the next few weeks. There was no significant difference in complication rate between bovine arch, type III aortic arch, obesity, degenerative disease of the spine and PAD subgroups.

No radial or brachial access site complications requiring surgical intervention or blood transfusion developed. Although radial artery patency assessment was not performed after the procedure, no hand ischemia symptoms occurred. Neither TIA nor myocardial infarction occurred.

In the matched TFA group, the composite endpoints occurred in 4 (6.3%) cases – 2 major ischemic strokes and 2 TIAs. No statistically significant differences were observed in the overall endpoints (4.8% vs. 6.3%; p = 0.697), major stroke (3.2% vs. 3.2%; p = 1.000), TIA (0% vs. 3.2%; p = 0.154) or death (1.6% vs. 0%; p = 0.315) between TRA/TBA and the matched TFA groups.

Discussion

The transfemoral approach (TFA) is the most common access for carotid angiography and carotid artery stenting as the majority of operators are familiar with this technique, it accepts the use of large diameter introducers (typically 9F for a proximal neuroprotection device) and is associated with a high technical success rate [10, 11]. Despite these advantages, the femoral approach has many limitations including problematic carotid cannulation in patients with a type III aortic arch or with a bovine arch. As reported by Nagarra et al., unfavorable aortic arch anatomy was an independent risk factor of periprocedural complication of CAS [12]. Faggioli et al. suggested that during transfemoral CAS, silent cerebral embolization (assessed with diffusion-weighted MR) is related not only to the stenting procedure but also to aortic arch catheter maneuvering – 58% patients had signs of ischemia in both hemispheres [13]. Therefore, the transradial approach may reduce catheter-induced embolization from the aortic arch by the avoidance of catheter manipulation [14].

Obesity, a well-known major public health issue, is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and one of the main causes of the increased risk of polyvascular atherosclerosis [15]. Ahmed’s meta-analysis reported the prevalence of asymptomatic carotid stenosis > 70% in patients with lower extremity artery disease (LEAD) at 14% [16]. Moreover, in Aboyans’s study, carotid disease appears to be twice as common among LEAD patients as among coronary artery disease patients [17]. Both obesity and LEAD are associated with more access site and bleeding complications after TFA interventions. Thus, in cases of severe obesity, aortoiliac disease or unfavorable aortic arch anatomy transradial access (TRA) remains a viable alternative. TRA was first introduced by invasive cardiologists and has become the first coronary access line due to the lower vascular/systemic complication rate and number of major bleeding events. In addition, fast mobilization after the TRA procedure results in increased comfort and shortens hospitalization time [18, 19]. Thus, TRA has also been proposed for the treatment of supra-aortic vessels, including extracranial carotid arteries [5, 20]. Compared with transradial coronary interventions, CAS via the radial/brachial artery is more challenging due to the need for use of dedicated systems and techniques, and it demands the highest level of experience from operators. Furthermore, the small size of the radial artery may exclude the use of large-diameter devices (> 7F), including proximal embolic protection systems.

Carotid artery stenting by the TRA/TBA may be performed using the contralateral or the ipsilateral radial artery. However, the right TRA/TBA may be the preferred strategy for cannulation of the right common carotid artery (CCA) or the left CCA, especially in the presence of a bovine arch. The advantage of the right radial/brachial approach is an adequate support (even at acute angles of the common carotid artery origin) and lower radiation exposure. TRA for non-bovine left internal carotid disease is more challenging due to the unfavorable origin angle resulting in insufficient support for the catheter system [21]. Keeping in mind all the above, we concluded that with optimal selection of cases, right radial/brachial artery access CAS may by successful in all cases.

The well-known benefits of radial access CAS are fewer vascular access complications and major bleeding events when compared with the femoral approach, especially in the older population [6]. Despite the fact that TBA has been shown to be associated with relatively high risk of vascular complications [22], in our study no access-site complications requiring surgical intervention or blood transfusion occurred.

Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (CHS) after carotid artery revascularization is a rare (< 1%) but potentially devastating complication of CAS leading to an intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) and death in up to 50% of cases [2325]. Preoperative risk factors for development of CHS/ICH include long standing hypertension, diabetes mellitus, advanced age, recent procedure on contralateral vessel (< 3 months), high degree of stenosis with poor collateral flow, severe contralateral carotid occlusion, recent stroke and/or ischemia or incomplete circle of Willis [26]. In our study, the patient who died as a result of an intracranial hemorrhage had many of the above risk factors – long-standing hypertension with severe obesity (BMI > 35 kg/m2), diabetes mellitus, recent stroke and 90% stenosis of the carotid artery with contralateral occlusion. In our case, ICH occurred 2 days after the procedure and it is consistent with the data showing that the average time from the CAS procedure to development of CHS was 12 h and no cases of CHS were described after 6 days [27]. The current practice is to discharge patients within 24–48 h of CAS; therefore they should be aware of the possibility of developing CHS after returning home.

Khan et al. identified multiple risk factors (clinical, institutional, angiographic and procedural) for stroke, death, and myocardial infarction (MI) within 1 month in patients undergoing carotid artery stent placement [28]. Distal embolization is the major neurological complication occurring after CAS, is not only limited to the procedural time and may occur at any stage of the procedure (including introduction/retrieval of the guiding catheter) [29, 30]. The use of novel, mesh-covered stents has revealed an important role of exclusion of atherosclerotic plaque from the circulation [31, 32], but their use does not guarantee full anti-embolic protection during CAS. In our group, two major ischemic strokes occurred within a few hours after CAS. Both patients had angiographic and clinical risk factors for peri- and postprocedural stroke (symptomatic status, diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney failure). Despite usage of a closed-cell designed stent (Roadsaver (Terumo) and Carotid Wallstent (Boston Scientific)) it was impossible to avoid neurological embolic complications in those patients.

The percentage of endpoints in TRA/TBA and the matched TFA groups was similar without statistically significant differences. It shows that despite the additional factors disqualifying from the femoral approach, TRA/TBA may constitute a viable alternative in these high-risk patients.

There are several important limitations of the study. First, this is a nonrandomized, retrospective observational registry involving a small group of selected patients. The second limitation is that microembolization was not assessed with imaging tests, and thus silent cerebral ischemia might have been overlooked.

Conclusions

Transradial and transbrachial CAS may be an effective and safe procedure, and it may constitute a viable alternative to the femoral approach in patients with severe peripheral artery disease, difficult aortic arch anatomy or obesity.

Conflict of interest

PP has received travel reimbursements for attending conferences, research grant funding, lecture honoraria, speakers fees from Abbott, Balton, Boston Scientific, Medtronic and Terumo. None of the other authors has competing interests to declare.

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