New Horizons in Peripheral Artery Disease
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is the lower limb manifestation of systemic atherosclerotic disease. PAD may initially present with symptoms of intermittent claudication, whilst chronic limb-threatening ischaemia (CLTI), the end stage of PAD, presents with rest pain and/or tissue loss. PAD is an age-related condition present in over 10% of those aged ≥65 in high-income countries. Guidelines regarding definition, diagnosis and staging of PAD and CLTI have been updated to reflect the changing patterns and presentations of disease given the increasing prevalence of diabetes. Recent research has changed guidelines on optimal medical therapy, with low-dose anticoagulant plus aspirin recommended in some patients. Recently published randomised trials highlight where bypass-first or endovascular-first approaches may be optimal in infra-inguinal disease. New techniques in endovascular surgery have increased minimally invasive options for ever more complex disease. Increasing recognition has been given to the complexity of patients with CLTI where a high prevalence of both frailty and cognitive impairment are present and a significant burden of multi-morbidity and polypharmacy. Despite advances in minimally invasive revascularisation techniques and reduction in amputation incidence, survival remains poor for many with CLTI. Shared decision-making is essential, and conservative management is often appropriate for older patients. There is emerging evidence of the benefit of specialist geriatric team input in the perioperative management of older patients undergoing surgery for CLTI. Recent UK guidelines now recommend screening for frailty, cognitive impairment and delirium in older vascular surgery patients as well as recommending all vascular surgery services have support and input from specialist geriatrics teams.
History
Citation
John S M Houghton, Athanasios N Saratzis, Rob D Sayers, Victoria J Haunton, New Horizons in Peripheral Artery Disease, Age and Ageing, Volume 53, Issue 6, June 2024, afae114, https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afae114Author affiliation
College of Life Sciences, Cardiovascular SciencesVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Age and AgeingVolume
53Issue
6Pagination
afae114Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)issn
0002-0729eissn
1468-2834Copyright date
2024Available date
2024-07-04Publisher DOI
Spatial coverage
EnglandLanguage
enPublisher version
Deposited by
Mr John HoughtonDeposit date
2024-07-03Rights Retention Statement
- No