Trial finds surgery can halve the risk of stroke

07/09/2004

Scientists funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC) and The Stroke Association have found that surgery can halve the risk of a stroke for people who have significant narrowing of the main artery carrying blood to the brain. Their findings, published in this week’s The Lancet, are the result of a large-scale international clinical trial.

Strokes happen when the blood supply to the brain is disrupted. Most strokes occur when a blood clot blocks an artery carrying blood to the brain. When the blood supply is disrupted, the brain cells are deprived of oxygen and other nutrients, causing some cells to become damaged and others to die. Some strokes are fatal while others cause permanent or temporary disabilities.

Patients with substantial narrowing of one of the main arteries, the carotid artery, are known to be at increased risk of stroke. But doctors were previously unclear whether a surgical procedure to alleviate the narrowing, known as a carotid endarterectomy, had a clear long-term benefit for such patients, when assessed against the risks of the surgery itself.

The trial compared immediate surgery for patients who had substantial narrowing of their arteries with deferred surgery. Over 3,000 patients in 126 hospitals in 30 countries took part in the study. The trial found that, after five years, people aged 75 and under who had immediate surgery halved their risk of a stroke from 12% to 6%.

Alison Halliday, a consultant vascular surgeon at St George’s Medical School in London, led the trial. She said: “It’s clear from our trial that immediate surgery is the best option for some patients with severe narrowing of the carotid artery. How much this changes practice across the health service will depend on how long the benefits last. We’re now going to follow these patients for another five years to find out.”

Dr Joanne Knight, Associate Director of Research and Development at The Stroke Association, said: “Each year over 130,000 people in England and Wales have a stroke, and it has a greater disability impact than any other medical condition. Addressing methods by which stroke can be prevented will directly help to reduce the number of people who experience the condition’s often devastating effects.

“This research shows that real results can be achieved by prioritising those patients at risk of stroke to have carotid endarterectomies.

“Whilst it’s vital that patients who are eligible for such treatment are carefully selected, it adds to the growing body of evidence that preventive treatment against stroke should receive a higher priority.”

Contact The Stroke Association media office

Medical Research Council website

Notes to editor

To interview Alison Halliday, contact the MRC Press Office on 020 7637 6011.

For a copy of The Lancet paper, contact Richard Lane in the Lancet Press Office on 020 7424 4949.

For more information about strokes, contact the Stroke Association Press Office on 020 7566 0328/1515

NOTES TO EDITORS

1. Each year over 130,000 people in England and Wales have a stroke. Of all people who suffer from a stroke, about a third are likely to die within the first 10 days, about a third are likely to make a recovery within one month and about a third are likely to be left disabled and needing rehabilitation. Stroke has a greater disability impact than any other medical condition. A quarter of a million people are living with long-term disability as a result of stroke in the UK.

2. The Stroke Association is the only national charity solely concerned with combating stroke in people of all ages. It funds research into prevention, treatment and better methods of rehabilitation and helps stroke patients and their families directly through its community services. These include dysphasia support, family support, information services, welfare grants, publications and leaflets. We also campaign, educate and inform to increase knowledge of stroke at all levels of society and we act as a voice for everyone affected by stroke.

3. A stroke happens when the blood supply to the brain is disrupted. Most strokes occur when a blood clot blocks the flow of blood to the brain. Some strokes are caused by bleeding in or around the brain from a burst blood vessel. When the blood supply is disrupted, parts of the brain become damaged or destroyed. Some strokes are fatal whist others can cause permanent or temporary paralysis to one side of the body and loss of the ability to speak, read or write. Recovery may be slow and can vary from person to person.


MEDICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AND THE STROKE ASSOCIATION MEDIA RELEASE