症状性非显著性颈动脉狭窄的动脉粥样硬化斑块不稳定

Q3 Medicine
Paul Cyréus MSc , Katarina Wadén MD , Sofie Hellberg MSc , Otto Bergman PhD , Mariette Lengquist MSc , Eva Karlöf MD, PhD , Andrew Buckler PhD , Ljubica Matic PhD , Joy Roy MD, PhD , David Marlevi PhD , Melody Chemaly PhD , Ulf Hedin MD, PhD
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的建议70%狭窄的患者行颈动脉内膜切除术治疗症状性颈动脉狭窄,50%狭窄的患者不建议行。由于不明显的、低程度的血管狭窄仍可能导致中风,因此精细的风险分层是必要的,这可以通过评估斑块不稳定的生物学特征来改进。为了挑战基于管腔狭窄的风险分层,我们比较了有症状的低程度(50%)和高程度(70%)狭窄患者颈动脉斑块的生物学特征,并探讨了低程度狭窄斑块不稳定的潜在机制。方法选取有症状的高程度狭窄患者204例和低程度狭窄患者34例,均为卡罗林斯卡动脉内膜切除术生物样本库的一部分。患者人口统计学、图像衍生斑块形态和提取病变的基因表达分析用于比较。通过使用降维、差异基因表达和基因集富集分析的转录组学来评估斑块生物学。免疫组织化学用于研究上调基因对应的蛋白。结果两组患者人口统计学差异有统计学意义。两组的钙化、富脂坏死核心、斑块内出血、斑块负荷、纤维帽厚度相似,而高度狭窄组富脂坏死核心和斑块内出血的总和更高(P = 0.033)。降维分析显示,与高度狭窄病变相比,低程度狭窄病变斑块基因表达的聚类分离性较差,而差异基因表达显示缺氧诱导因子3A上调(log2倍变化,0.7212;P = .0003),基因集富集分析确定了与低程度狭窄的组织缺氧和血管生成相关的途径。缺氧诱导因子3- α蛋白与新血管化斑块区域的平滑肌细胞有关。结论有症状的低程度颈动脉狭窄患者的斑块表现出与高度狭窄患者的斑块相当的动脉粥样硬化斑块不稳定的形态学和生物学特征,这强调了对所有有症状的颈动脉狭窄患者进行卒中风险分层干预的必要性,而不考虑管腔狭窄。缺氧诱导因子3A在低程度狭窄病变中的表达增加,提示斑块不稳定的机制与组织缺氧和斑块血管生成有关,但缺氧诱导因子3A在这一过程中的确切作用仍有待确定。临床相关性50%狭窄症状患者的颈动脉斑块表现出斑块不稳定的形态学和生物学特征,与高度狭窄相当,这强调了在狭窄严重程度之外改善卒中风险分层的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Atherosclerotic plaque instability in symptomatic non-significant carotid stenoses

Atherosclerotic plaque instability in symptomatic non-significant carotid stenoses

Objective

Carotid endarterectomy for symptomatic carotid stenosis is recommended for patients with >70% stenosis, but not in those with <50%. Because non-significant, low-degree stenoses may still cause strokes, refined risk stratification is necessary, which could be improved by assessing biological features of plaque instability. To challenge risk-stratification based on luminal narrowing, we compared biological features of carotid plaques from symptomatic patients with low-degree (<50%) vs high-degree (>70%) stenosis and explored potential mechanisms behind plaque instability in low-degree stenoses.

Methods

Endarterectomy specimens were taken from symptomatic patients with high-degree (n = 204) and low-degree (n = 34) stenosis, all part of the Biobank of Karolinska Endarterectomies. Patient demographics, image-derived plaque morphology, and gene expression analyses of extracted lesions were used for comparisons. Plaque biology was assessed by transcriptomics using dimensionality reduction, differential gene expression, and gene-set enrichment analyses. Immunohistochemistry was used to study proteins corresponding to upregulated genes.

Results

The demographics of the two groups were statistically similar. Calcification, lipid-rich necrotic core, intraplaque hemorrhage, plaque burden, and fibrous cap thickness were similar in both groups, whereas the sum of lipid-rich necrotic core and intraplaque hemorrhage was higher (P = .033) in the high-degree stenosis group. Dimensionality reduction analysis indicated poor clustering separation of plaque gene expression in low-compared with high-degree stenosis lesions, whereas differential gene expression showed upregulation of hypoxia-inducible factor 3A (log2 fold change, 0.7212; P = .0003), and gene-set enrichment analyses identified pathways related to tissue hypoxia and angiogenesis in low-degree stenoses. Hypoxia-inducible factor 3-alpha protein was associated with smooth muscle cells in neo-vascularized plaque regions.

Conclusions

Plaques from symptomatic patients with non-significant low-degree carotid stenoses showed morphologic and biological features of atherosclerotic plaque instability that were comparable to plaques from patients with high-degree stenoses, emphasizing the need for improved stroke risk stratification for intervention in all patients with symptomatic carotid stenosis irrespective of luminal narrowing. An increased expression of hypoxia-inducible factor 3A in low-degree stenotic lesions suggested mechanisms of plaque instability associated with tissue hypoxia and plaque angiogenesis, but the exact role of hypoxia-inducible factor 3A in this process remains to be determined.

Clinical relevance

Carotid plaques from symptomatic patients with <50% stenosis show morphologic and biological features of plaque instability, comparable to high-degree stenosis, which emphasizes the need for improved stroke risk stratification beyond stenosis severity.
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