Objectives: The benefits of prophylactic carotid endarterectomy (CEA) together with best medical treatment (BMT) are well-established. Early initiation of proper medical treatment reduces the risk of new strokes as waiting periods for CEA operation can be considerably long. We investigated: (1) preoperative medical treatment of CEA patients at our hospital and (2) how well the present medical treatment coheres with national and international secondary prevention guidelines and other CEA cohorts.
Methods: A retrospective study cohort of 135 consecutive patients planned for CEA in a tertiary center because of symptomatic (n = 100) or asymptomatic (n = 35) carotid artery stenosis during a 14-month period (2007-2008).
Results: One hundred and twenty-six of 135 (93.3%) patients received antiplatelet therapy at the time of surgery, 125/135 (92.6%) were on statin, and 121/135 (89.6%) used antihypertensive medications. Ten of the 100 symptomatic patients had recurrence or progression in their ischemic symptoms while waiting for the operation, with a median time of 8.5 days (range 1-30 days).
Discussion: Carotid artery stenosis patients are considered high-risk patients regardless of symptomatology. The high proportion of medication use exceeds the use in the past proof-of-concept randomized controlled trials on the benefit of CEA+BMT over BMT. Nevertheless, there is room for improvement.