December 21st, 2010
Rick Lange & David Hillis: Looking Back at 2010 and Ahead to 2011
Richard A. Lange, MD, MBA and L. David Hillis, MD
To celebrate the holiday season, CardioExchange asked several of our contributors to choose the 3 most important cardiology-related events of the past year and to make 3 predictions for 2011.
Looking back at 2010:
1. Stenting Versus Endarterectomy for Carotid-Artery Stenosis: In patients with carotid artery stenoses, stenting and endarterectomy were associated with similar rates of the primary composite endpoint — periprocedural stroke, MI, or death and subsequent ipsilateral stroke. However, the incidence of periprocedural stroke was lower in the endarterectomy group, whereas the incidence of periprocedural MI was lower in those undergoing stenting. Carotid artery stenting tended to show greater efficacy in those <70 years of age, whereas endarterectomy was more efficacious in older subjects. Our take: Since stenting and endarterectomy have similar overall efficacy, the patient can decide which procedure and risk are preferable. Physicians should “point” their older patients toward endarterectomy.
Predictions for 2011:
1. Governmental scrutiny of the use of interventional procedures will increase…..as will the oversight of physicians and hospitals who encourage their overuse (as recently reported in Baltimore, MD, and Austin, TX).
Insightful and succinct review and predictions.
The fact that PPIs are safe in patients on anti-platelet therapy is highly reassuring.
Competing interests pertaining specifically to this post, comment, or both:
No conflicts of interest.