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Landmark Trial Shows Carotid Stenting
Beneficial
For Patients With Disease
But No Symptoms
Findings of Largest
Multi-Center Trial Released at ACC
NEW YORK, NY, March 14, 2006 – Results from the largest-ever
multi-center U.S. registry on the efficacy of carotid stenting shows
that the procedure is safe in patients who are at high risk for
standard surgical therapy.
The registry, an FDA-required post-approval study, known as CAPTURE
(Carotid ACCULINK/ACCUNET Post Approval Trial to Uncover Rare Events)
was presented today at the American College of Cardiology’s 55th Annual
Session in Atlanta. The multi-center study was led by Columbia
University Medical Center researchers at NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Columbia.
Patients with carotid artery blockage have an increased risk of stroke,
even if they experience none of the disease’s symptoms, which can
include weakness, paralysis, visual problems or speech difficulties.
The risk of stroke over five years in asymptomatic patients is about
one in eight if carotid artery disease is treated only with medical
therapy. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services currently does
not cover carotid stenting for these asymptomatic patients, so many
turn to surgery to clear blocked arteries. However, some patients are
ineligible for surgery because of other medical conditions.
In CAPTURE, the researchers collected data on 2,500 patients at
increased risk for surgery. They were treated by 240
interventionalists at 188 medical centers across the country. All
patients received Guidant’s FDA-approved RX ACCULINK Carotid Stent
System with RX ACCUNET Embolic Protection System. Neurologists
otherwise unaffiliated with the study also evaluated patients
immediately before and after stenting, and again 30 days later to judge
the outcomes of the procedure.
Among asymptomatic patients, the trial found that the rate of major
complications (death, stroke or heart attack) within 30 days of the
stenting procedure was 5.7 percent, which is lower than the rate found
in other studies of similar patients who undergo surgery.
“The scope of this landmark trial provides us with a clear picture of
the patients who benefit the most from carotid artery stenting. We hope
these results will expand coverage to asymptomatic patients who are
risky candidates for surgery,” said William Gray, M.D., principal
investigator on the study and associate professor of clinical medicine
at Columbia University Medical Center and director of endovascular
services at the Center for Interventional Vascular Therapy at
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia and the Cardiovascular Research
Foundation.
Preliminary results on 1,600 patients in the CAPTURE trial were
presented at the Cardiovascular Research Foundation’s Transcatheter
Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) meeting in October 2005. The results
from the 2500 patients confirm the earlier suggestion that carotid
artery stenting is highly beneficial for asymptomatic high-risk
patients.
The FDA approved carotid artery stenting for symptomatic patients
following the pivotal ARCHeR trial, which enrolled a significantly
smaller number of patients at centers with expert experience in carotid
artery stenting. The larger CAPTURE trial was designed to determine the
safety and efficacy of carotid stenting among a broader group of
interventionalists with more variable levels of experience. At
5.7 percent, the CAPTURE trial had an even lower combined rate of
death, stroke and heart attack than the ARCHeR trial, which had an 8.3
percent rate. The current study also looked for complications that
might have gone undetected in the ARCHeR trial, but did not find any.
The CAPTURE trial found that carotid artery stenting had better
outcomes in younger patients. Stroke, death or heart attack
occurred in 8.9 percent of patients over the age of 80, compared to 4.8
percent of patients under 80. The lowest percentage of adverse
effects - 4.2 percent - were in asymptomatic patients under the age of
80.
It is anticipated that the positive results of this trial will support
the re-examination, and eventual expansion, of current CMS
reimbursement for this procedure and allow access to this promising
technology for a greater number of beneficiaries.
In patients with carotid artery disease, the arteries that supply blood
to the brain can develop atherosclerosis, a buildup of fat and
cholesterol deposits, decreasing blood flow to the brain and increasing
the risk of stroke. Approximately 25 percent of strokes are caused by
carotid artery disease. Carotid artery stenting is a minimally invasive
procedure that combines balloon angioplasty and a stent implant to
unblock and reopen the carotid artery.
###
Columbia University
Medical Center provides international leadership in pre-clinical
and clinical research, in medical and health sciences education, and in
patient care. The medical center trains future leaders in health care
and includes the dedicated work of many physicians, scientists, nurses,
dentists, and public health professionals at the College of Physicians
& Surgeons, the College of Dental Medicine, the School of Nursing,
the Mailman School of Public Health, the biomedical departments of the
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and allied research centers and
institutions. Columbia University Medical Center researchers are
leading the discovery of novel therapies and advances to address a wide
range of health conditions. www.cumc.columbia.edu
NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital is the largest not-for-profit, non-sectarian hospital
in the country. It provides state-of-the art inpatient,
ambulatory and preventive care in all areas of medicine at five major
centers: New York-Presbyterian hospital/Columbia University
Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical
Center, Children’s Hospital of New York-Presbyterian, the Allen
Pavilion, and the Westchester Division. It consistently ranks as
one of the top hospitals in the country in U.S. News & World
Report’s guide to “America’s Best Hospitals.” The New
York-Presbyterian Healthcare System – an affiliation of acute-care and
community hospitals, long-term care facilities, ambulatory sites, and
specialty institutes –serves one in four patients in the New York
metropolitan area.
The Cardiovascular
Research Foundation is dedicated to research and education in
the broad subspecialty of interventional cardiology and endovascular
medicine. By establishing the safe use of new technologies and
pharmacologic agents, CRF has for more than 15 years played a major
role in the remarkable advances in survival and quality of life being
realized for patients with cardiovascular disease. By collaborating
with talented colleagues from around the world and through the
development of innovative educational programs, CRF serves as a major
catalyst in the field of interventional vascular medicine.
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