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Intracranial Stenting; the Current Landscape

Article information

Neurointervention. 2021;16(1):2-5
Publication date (electronic) : 2021 February 24
doi : https://doi.org/10.5469/neuroint.2021.00087
Department of Radiology, Severance Hospital, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
Correspondence to: Dong Joon Kim, MD, PhD Department of Radiology, Severance Hospital, Yonsei University College of Medicine, 50-1 Yonsei-ro, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul 03722, Korea Tel: +82-2-2228-7400 Fax: +82-2-393-3035 E-mail : djkimmd@yuhs.ac
Received 2021 February 16; Revised 2021 February 19; Accepted 2021 February 19.

Intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis (ICAS) is one of the most common causes of stroke worldwide, and it is of special concern in the Asian population due to its higher prevalence [1,2]. ICAS is the cause of ischemic stroke in 30–50% in Asians, compared to 8–10% in North America [2]. The high recurrence rate and the disability caused by the stroke warrants a safe and effective treatment method. Bypass surgery as well as endovascular treatment have been tested against best the medical therapy, but current best evidence does not support either surgery or intervention as the primary treatment modality for ICAS lesions (Table 1) [3-6].

Summary of intracranial stenosis trials

In this regard, the Stenting and Aggressive Medical Management for Preventing Recurrent Stroke in Intracranial Stenosis (SAMMPRIS) randomized trial and its post-hoc studies in addition to the single-arm Wingspan Stent System Post Market Surveillance (WEAVE) trial and its 1 year follow up results (Wingspan One-year Vascular Events and Neurologic Outcomes [WOVEN] trial) published last year shed some insights into the importance of patient selection concerning who may or may not benefit from intracranial stenting for ICAS lesions [4,7,8].

The WEAVE trial adhered strictly to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on label usage criteria in terms of patient age, stenosis degree, baseline neurological status, type of stroke, medical failure, and time to intervention, resulting in a highly selected group of patients for stenting (Table 1) [7]. The results of the 1-year follow-up of the WEAVE trial (WOVEN trial) showed a primary endpoint rate of 8.5%. Postperiprocedural (1 month to 1 year) event rates were comparable between the WOVEN (5.4%) vs. SAMMPRIS stenting (5.3%) vs. SAMMPRIS aggressive medical management (AMM, 6.5%) results. Moreover, most of the strokes in the postperiprocedural period were minor strokes (6 of 7 cases) suggesting that decreasing the periprocedural event rate is critical and that there may be clinical benefits of stenting at 1 year follow up in these selected patients [7,8]. This is uplifting news; however, good single-arm interventional results have not been duplicated in double-arm studies for ICAS. Further trials comparing these best stenting protocols with the best medical therapy are warranted.

Another important insight is that the pathological mechanism of stroke should be distinguished. There is growing evidence that patients with hemodynamic dominant stroke may benefit most in contrast to those with perforator stroke. Although most subgroup analyses of the SAMMPRIS study did not show favorable results for the stenting arm, the post-hoc analysis of the medical arm showed that recurrent stroke rates were higher in patients with a borderzone infarct pattern on magnetic resonance imaging/computed tomography and impaired collateral flow (36.7%) compared to other groups combined (7.7%) (p<0.05). The primary endpoint rates were numerically lower in the stenting arm in patients with hemodynamic infarct compared to the AMM arm (18.2% vs. 26.4%), suggesting that these patients may be a promising population for stenting [9]. The WEAVE trial did not systematically exclude patients with perforator-type stroke; however, underdilation of the balloon to 60% rather than the standard 80% of the normal vessel diameter was recommended when directly adjacent to visible perforators. The resulting rate of perforator stroke in this trial was only 0.7% [7].

Issues remain despite these promising new insights. Strict adherence to the conservative FDA indications for ICAS stenting may result in super selection of patients [10]. Many aspects, including the limitation of patients to medical failure (≥2 strokes with at least 1 stroke while on medical therapy), type of qualifying event (stroke or transient ischemic attack), and the time to treatment, may need further investigation [11-14]. In terms of time to treatment, the current major focus in ICAS stenting is decreasing the high periprocedural risk. Thus, stenting is often delayed to avoid risks associated with unstable plaque and possibly hyperperfusion [15,16]. However, the recurrent stroke rate is highest in this early post-ictus period; thus, an effective treatment should target this critical period. Lessons learned from recent studies and the ongoing growth of experience in areas, such as rescue intracranial stenting in ICAS related acute stroke, may interplay to open new doors in the near future [17].

Meanwhile, we await newer insights from the Angioplasty and Stenting for Patients With Symptomatic Intracranial Atherosclerosis (NCT02689037) and the China Angioplasty & Stenting for Symptomatic Intracranial Severe Stenosis (CASSISS, NCT01763320) trials [18,19].

Notes

Fund

None.

Conflicts of Interest

DJK has been the Associate Editor of the Neurointervention since 2018. No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

References

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2. Wang T, Luo J, Wang X, Yang K, Jadhav V, Gao P, et al. Endovascular therapy versus medical treatment for symptomatic intracranial artery stenosis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2020;(8):CD013267.
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Article information Continued

Table 1.

Summary of intracranial stenosis trials

Trial Study design Indication Interval Primary endpoint Periprocedural risk/ safety outcome Long term FU
EC-IC bypass [3] Randomized, multicenter Recent hemispheric stroke, retinal infarction, TIA with atherosclerotic narrowing or occlusion of ipsilateral ICA or MCA Randomization to surgery; 9 days 14% increase of relative risk in surgical group* 0.6% & 2.5%
Best medical care (ASA)+STA/MCA bypass vs. best medical care
WASID [5] Randomized, multicenter TIA or stroke caused by 50–99% symptomatic major intracranial stenosis 21.8% vs. 22.1%, (p=0.83, at 1.8 year FU) Death 9.7% vs. 4.3%/Major hemorrhage 8.3% vs. 3.2%, (p=0.02/p=0.01, at 1.8 year FU)
Warfarin vs. ASA
SAMMPRIS [4,15] Randomized, multicenter Recent TIA or stroke attributed to 70–99% stenosis of major intracranial artery Symptom to randomization; 7 days vs. 7 days (median) 20.0% vs. 12.2% (p=0.009, at 1 year)§ 30 day stroke/death; 14.7% vs. 5.8% (p=0.002) 23% vs. 15% (p=0.0252, at median 32.4 month FU)††
Wingspan stent+AMM vs. AMM (ASA for entire FU+clopidogrel for 90 days+BP/LDL cholesterol control+lifestyle modification program)
VISSIT [6] Randomized, multicenter Symptomatic ICAS (70–99%) involving ICA, MCA, VA, BA with a hard TIA or stroke attributable to the target lesion within the past 30 days Event to randomization; 12.3 vs. 15.2 days (mean) 36.2% vs. 15.1% (p=0.02, at 1 year)|| Any stroke, death, or ICH within 30 days of randomization+any hard TIA between day 2–30 of randomization; 24.1% vs. 9.4% (p=0.05)
Balloon expandable stent+medical vs. medical
WEAVE [7] Single-arm, multicenter, Wingspan stent 22–80 years old, symptomatic ICAS 70–99% (artery Ø ≥2 mm), baseline mRS ≤3, ≥2 strokes in the vascular territory of the stenotic lesion with at least 1 stroke while on medical therapy, and stenting ≥8 days after the last stroke Stroke to stent interval; 22 days (median, range; 8–371 days) 2.6%
WOVEN [6] WEAVE 1 year FU 8.5%* Stroke severity; Minor/major stroke n=6/1

EC-IC, Extracranial to intracranial; WASID, Warfarin–Aspirin Symptomatic Intracranial Disease; SAMMPRIS, Stenting and Aggressive Medical Management for Preventing Recurrent Stroke in Intracranial Stenosis; VISSIT, Vitesse Intracranial Stent Study for Ischemic Stroke Therapy; WEAVE, Wingspan Stent System Post Market Surveillance; WOVEN, Wingspan One-year Vascular Events and Neurologic Outcomes; ASA, acetylsalicylic acid; STA, superficial temporal artery; MCA, middle cerebral artery; TIA, transient ischemic attack; ICAS, intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis; ICA, internal carotid artery; VA, vertebral artery; BA, basilar artery; BP, blood pressure; LDL, low density lipoprotein; ICH, intracranial hemorrhage; AMM; aggressive medical management; FU, follow up.

*

Fatal & nonfatal stroke.

30 day surgical mortality & major stroke morbidity rate.

Ischemic stroke, brain hemorrhage, death from vascular causes other than stroke

§

Stroke or death within 30 days after enrollment or after a revascularization procedure for the qualifying lesion during the FU period or ischemic stroke in the territory of the qualifying artery between day 31 and the end of the follow-up period.

||

Stroke in the same territory within 12 months of randomization or hard TIA in the same territory day 2 through month 12 postrandomization.

Stroke or death within 72 hours.

**

Stroke within the target artery territory, non-traumatic hemorrhage, or neurologic death within 1 year following stenting.

††

Any stroke or death within 30 days after enrolment, ischaemic stroke in the territory of the qualifying artery beyond 30 days of enrolment, or any stroke or death within 30 days after a revascularisation procedure of the qualifying lesion during follow-up.