An International, Expert-based, Multispecialty Delphi Consensus Document on Stroke Risk Stratification and the Optimal Management of Patients with Asymptomatic and Symptomatic Carotid Stenosis.

Paraskevas KI, AbuRahma AF, Moore WS, Gloviczki P, Perler BA, Clair DG, White CJ, Setacci C, Secemsky EA, Schneider PA, Zeebregts CJAM, Mansilha A, Saba L, Loftus IM, Jim J, Liapis CD, Di Lazzaro V, Dardik A, Poredos P, Thapar A, Scali ST, D’Oria M, Blinc A, Svetlikov A, Stone DH, Sultan SAH, Bulja D, Stoner MC, Myrcha P, Uyttenboogaart M, Farber MA, Faggioli G, Crupi D, Csobay-Novak C, Eldrup-Jorgensen J, Lanza G, de Borst GJ, Stilo F, Dermody M, Silvestrini M, Abularrage CJ, Goudot G, Proczka RM, Roubin GS, Spinelli F, Menyhei G, Shahidi SH, Lorenzo JIL, Jawien A, Reiff T, Capoccia L, Fernandes JFE, Musiałek P, Gurevich VS, Blecha M, Hicks CW, Erben YM, Conrad MF, Malas MB, Lyden SP, Chaturvedi S, Schermerhorn ML, Nicolaides AN. An International, Expert-based, Multispecialty Delphi Consensus Document on Stroke Risk Stratification and the Optimal Management of Patients with Asymptomatic and Symptomatic Carotid Stenosis.. Journal of vascular surgery. 2025; PMID: 41005511

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The optimal management of patients with asymptomatic (AsxCS) and symptomatic (SxCS) carotid stenosis is controversial and includes intensive medical management (i.e., best medical therapy [BMT]) with/without an additional carotid revascularization procedure (i.e., carotid endarterectomy [CEA], transfemoral carotid artery stenting [TFCAS] or TransCarotid Artery Revascularization [TCAR]). The aim of this international, expert-based, multispecialty Delphi Consensus document was to reconcile the conflicting views regarding the optimal management of AsxCS and SxCS patients.

METHODS: A three-round Delphi Consensus process was performed including 63 experts from Europe (n=37) and the United States (n=26). A total of 6 different clinical scenarios were identified involving patients with either AsxCS or SxCS. For each scenario, 5 treatment options were available: (i) BMT alone, (ii) BMT plus CEA, (iii) BMT plus TFCAS, (iv) BMT plus TCAR, or (v) BMT plus CEA/TFCAS/TCAR. Differences in treatment preferences between U.S. and European participants were assessed using Fisher's Exact Test, and odds ratios were used to quantify the magnitude and direction of association. Consensus was achieved when >70% of the Delphi Consensus participants agreed on a therapeutic approach.

RESULTS: Most participants concurred that BMT alone is not adequate for the management of a 70-year-old fit male or female patient with 80-99% AsxCS (52/63; 82.5% and 45/63; 71.5%, respectively). In contrast, most panelists would opt for BMT alone for an 80-year-old male AsxCS patient with several co-morbidities (48/63; 76.2%). The majority of participants would opt for BMT plus a carotid revascularization procedure for an 80-year-old male SxCS patient with a recent ipsilateral cerebrovascular event, an ipsilateral 70-99% SxCS and a 5-year predicted risk of ipsilateral ischemic event of 10% (54/63; 85.7%), 15% (59/63; 93.6%), or 20% (63/63; 100%). The opinion of U.S.-based participants varied from that of Europe-based respondents in some scenarios.

CONCLUSIONS: The panel agreed that BMT alone is insufficient for most patients with SxCS, and that select subgroups of AsxCS patients may also benefit from revascularization, especially when high-risk features are present. Patients should be stratified according to their predicted stroke risk, as well as their individual clinical/anatomical/imaging features and should be treated accordingly.

Last updated on 09/27/2025
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