4.6 Article

Challenges and Pitfalls in CT-Angiography Evaluation of Carotid Bulb Stenosis: Is It Time for a Reappraisal?

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life12111678

Keywords

carotid stenosis; CT-angiography; NASCET; ECST

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The study aimed to anatomically evaluate the carotid bulb using CT-angiography, propose a new index (RegX) for carotid stenosis quantification, and assess the accuracy of the relationship between NASCET and ECST methods in a large adult population. The results demonstrated that the RegX index provided a consistent and accurate measure of carotid stenosis through the application of the ECST method, departing from the previously established relationships between NASCET and ECST values.
We aimed to perform an anatomical evaluation of the carotid bulb using CT-angiography, implement a new reliable index for carotid stenosis quantification and to assess the accuracy of relationship between NASCET and ECST methods in a large adult population. The cross-sectional areas of the healthy carotid at five levels were measured by two experienced radiologists. A regression analysis was performed in order to quantify the relationship between the areas of the carotid bulb at different carotid bulbar level. A new index (Regression indeX, RegX) for carotid stenosis quantification was proposed. Five different stenoses with different grade in three bulbar locations were simulated for all patients for a total of 1365 stenoses and were used for a direct comparison of the RegX, NASCET, and ECST methods. The results of this study demonstrated that the RegX index provided a consistent and accurate measure of carotid stenosis through the application of the ECST method, avoiding the limitations of NASCET method. Furthermore, our results strongly depart from the consolidated relationships between NASCET and ECST values used in clinical practice and reported in extensive medical literature. In particular, we highlighted that a major misdiagnosis in patient selection for CEA could be introduced because of the large underestimation of real stenosis degree provided by the NASCET method. A reappraisal of carotid stenosis patients' work-up is evoked by the effectiveness of state-of-the-art noninvasive contemporary carotid imaging.

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