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Advanced carotid plaque characterization: Assessment of vulnerability

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1 Advanced carotid plaque characterization: Assessment of vulnerability
William A. Gray MD Director of Endovascular Services Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine

2 I have no real or apparent conflicts of interest to report.
William A. Gray, MD I have no real or apparent conflicts of interest to report.

3 Overview Potential importance of carotid plaque morphology
Methods of carotid plaque characterization Contrast-enhanced ultrasound MRI PET Intravascular ultrasound with virtual histology Perspectives

4 Intra-plaque hemorrhage
The “smoking gun” Fat-suppressed T1 Fat-suppressed T2 Intra-plaque hemorrhage

5 Potential importance of carotid plaque morphology
Key factors in advanced plaque relating to activity Condition of the fibrous cap Size of the necrotic core Degree of intra-plaque hemorrhage Extent of inflammatory activity May have relevance in: Natural history of plaque and stroke Impact of medical therapy Selecting the at-risk asymptomatic patient for revascularization Selecting revascularization method

6 The culprit carotid plaque
Large (voluminous), lipid-rich necrotic core Thin over-lying fibrous cap (TCFA) Inflammatory cell infiltration Proteolysis Apoptosis Angiogenesis/neovascularization

7 Contrast-enhanced ultrasound
Definity IV injection Lipid pools Intraplaque vessels Hoogi A et al. AJR 2011; 196:431–436

8 CEUS has good correlation with histology

9 MRI acquisition and enhancements
Fat-suppression Reduces adjacent fat signals allowing better plaque characterization Contrast imaging Gadolinium Differentiates fibrous cap from lipid core USPIO (ultra-small paramagnetic iron oxide) allows detection of macrophage infiltration Advances in receiver coil and pulse sequence design have resulted in high spatial resolution imaging of plaques

10 MRI plaque characterization
Fat-suppressed T1 Fat-suppressed T2 Source image TOF MRA Masson-Trichrome Watanabe Y et al. Neuroradiology (2010) 52:253–274

11 MRI and plaque at CEA Lipid core TOF MRA TOF source image
Fat-suppressed T1 Fat-suppressed T2 Lipid core Watanabe Y et al. Neuroradiology (2010) 52:253–274

12 18F-FDG (Fluorodeoxyglucose) PET
Coronal view of a 50-70% symptomatic stenosis of the internal carotid artery on the left side in a 77-year-old male patient as shown by FDG-PET-CT imaging. Hermus L et al. Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg (2010) 39, 125e133

13 Labeled MMPI (proteolysis) and Annexin A5 (apoptosis)
Hypercholestrolemic rabbit aorta Hermus L et al. Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg (2010) 39, 125e133

14 Intravascular US with virtual histology
Inglese L et al. J Cardiovasc Surg 2009;50:735-44 Matsumoto S et al. Cerebrovasc Dis 2010;29:468–475

15 Weak correlation with VH and debris
Matsumoto S et al. Cerebrovasc Dis 2010;29:468–475

16 Perspectives In asymptomatic carotid stenosis, rates of stroke events either with natural history (~2%-3%/year), CAS or CEA (1.0%-1.5%) very low PROSPECT coronary analogue Any advanced plaque imaging modality with clinical utility would need: High positive predictive value for a given marker(s) within a clinical relevant time window It is akin to predicting earthquakes…

17 Thank you


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