Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2022)

Clinical Outcomes of Second- versus First-Generation Carotid Stents: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

  • Adam Mazurek,
  • Krzysztof Malinowski,
  • Kenneth Rosenfield,
  • Laura Capoccia,
  • Francesco Speziale,
  • Gianmarco de Donato,
  • Carlo Setacci,
  • Christian Wissgott,
  • Pasqualino Sirignano,
  • Lukasz Tekieli,
  • Andrey Karpenko,
  • Waclaw Kuczmik,
  • Eugenio Stabile,
  • David Christopher Metzger,
  • Max Amor,
  • Adnan H. Siddiqui,
  • Antonio Micari,
  • Piotr Pieniążek,
  • Alberto Cremonesi,
  • Joachim Schofer,
  • Andrej Schmidt,
  • Piotr Musialek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11164819
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 16
p. 4819

Abstract

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Background: Single-cohort studies suggest that second-generation stents (SGS; “mesh stents”) may improve carotid artery stenting (CAS) outcomes by limiting peri- and postprocedural cerebral embolism. SGS differ in the stent frame construction, mesh material, and design, as well as in mesh-to-frame position (inside/outside). Objectives: To compare clinical outcomes of SGS in relation to first-generation stents (FGSs; single-layer) in CAS. Methods: We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical studies with FGSs and SGS (PRISMA methodology, 3302 records). Endpoints were 30-day death, stroke, myocardial infarction (DSM), and 12-month ipsilateral stroke (IS) and restenosis (ISR). A random-effect model was applied. Results: Data of 68,422 patients from 112 eligible studies (68.2% men, 44.9% symptomatic) were meta-analyzed. Thirty-day DSM was 1.30% vs. 4.11% (p p = 0.02 and p p = 0.014; DSM 1.3% vs. 3.15%, p p p = 0.04), CGuard showed a reduction in both IS and ISR (−3.13%, −3.63%; p = 0.01, p < 0.01), whereas the Gore stent was neutral. Conclusions: Pooled SGS use was associated with improved short- and long-term clinical results of CAS. Individual SGS types, however, differed significantly in their outcomes, indicating a lack of a “mesh stent” class effect. Findings from this meta-analysis may provide clinically relevant information in anticipation of large-scale randomized trials.

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