Impact of Degree of Stenosis on Time-To-Peak Delay in High Grade Asymptomatic Carotid Artery Disease

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Publication Date

2-2026

Publication Title

Stroke

Abstract

Objectives: Cerebral hemodynamic impairment in patients with asymptomatic high-grade internal carotid artery (ICA) stenosis confers a risk of stroke and cognitive decline, but correlations between degree of stenosis and hemodynamic impairment are derived from small case series only. Using baseline data from 282 participants in the Carotid Revascularization and Medical Management for Asymptomatic Carotid Stenosis – Hemodynamics (CREST-H) study, we hypothesized that degree of stenosis, measured by peak systolic velocity (PSV) and end diastolic velocity (EDV) in the ipsilateral ICA, would correlate with time-to-peak (TTP) delay using MR (n=275) or CT (n=7) perfusion scans, adjusting for demographic and cardiovascular risk variables.   Methods: Using a 7-10MHz Doppler probe, ICA PSV and EDV were assessed. Doppler results were adjudicated centrally. Dynamic contrast perfusion imaging was standardized across 61 CREST-H sites, using sequential T2*-weighted time-sequence scanning (e.g. TR=1500, TE=25ms, flip angle=60deg, phase=128, slice thickness=5mm for GE 3T magnet). CTP was acquired with standard clinical protocols. TTP delay was calculated in the ipsilateral versus contralateral MCA/ACA territories using OLEA software. Linear regression used TTP delay as the outcome variable and PSV and EDV as predictor variables, adjusting for covariates.The 282 with complete data for all variables were included in the analysis.   Results: Among 392 CREST-H participants, 63% were men, 7% Black, 3% Hispanic, 33% with less than college education.Tables 1a/b show the regression results for PSV and EDV as main predictor variables. PSV and EDV on the index side significantly correlated with TTP delay (p=0.004, p=0.002 respectively). Neither PSV nor EDV on the non-index side correlated with TTP delay (p=0.49, p=0.82). Compared with moderate exercise, vigorous exercise correlated with lower TTP delay in both models (p=0.05. p=0.04). Compared with college graduates, those with HS education had longer TTP delays in both models (p=0.03. p=0.02).   Conclusions: In this large cohort of patients with high-grade asymptomatic carotid stenosis, higher flow velocities correlated with greater TTP delays, suggesting an increasing hemodynamic impairment with greater degree of stenosis above 70%. Our findings have implications for management of asymptomatic carotid stenosis which are being tested in the CREST-H and CREST-2 studies. Exercise and education may independently impact cerebral hemodynamics.

Volume

57

Issue

Suppl 1

Comments

American Stroke Association International Stroke Conference, February 4–6, 2026, New Orleans, LA

DOI

10.1161/str.57.suppl_1.TP199

ISSN

0039-2499

Share

COinS