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How to Avoid the Unnecessary Cardiovascular Operations of Philip Roth's 'Everyman'

<ѻý class="mpt-content-deck">— The Skeptical Cardiologist discusses the book's lessons for patients
MedpageToday
A photo of Philip Roth

Earlier this year, the skeptical cardiologist wrote about the cardiovascular misadventures of the main character in .

I had initially intended this as a single blog post but very quickly realized there were more important points about cardiovascular disease management than could be contained in a 1,000-word post.

After Roth's Everyman is rushed to the hospital to undergo an invasive coronary angiogram he likely didn't need, he is then rushed off to undergo coronary bypass surgery he likely didn't need. In 1998, at the age of 65, he undergoes renal artery stenting for high blood pressure, a procedure now considered of dubious value.

The First Unnecessary Carotid Surgery

One year after his renal artery stent, he had a left carotid endarterectomy (CEA) which he describes as "surgery for another major obstruction, this one in his left carotid artery, one of the two main arteries that stretch from the aorta to the base of the skull and supply blood to the brain, and that if left obstructed could cause a disabling stroke or even sudden death."

He goes on to describe the procedure in some detail: "the incision was made in the neck, then the artery feeding the brain was clamped shut to stop the blood flowing through it. Then it was slit open and the plaque that was causing the blockage scraped out and removed."

He is told "from a medical point of view, it was nothing extraordinary, or so he was led to believe by the agreeable surgeon, who assured him that a carotid endarterectomy was a common vascular surgical procedure and he would be back at his easel within a day or two."

A lot has changed since Everyman had his CEA in 1999. My practice in the 90s was to strongly consider referring my patients with asymptomatic carotid obstructions >70% for CEA, but as medical treatments for atherosclerosis advanced, since 2010 studies began showing minimal benefit in reducing stroke for CEA.

In 2022, I am rarely sent a patient who has not had a stroke or transient ischemic attack for CEA.

A noted, "the role of CEA in asymptomatic patients has been a source of considerable controversy, with some countries performing large numbers of CEA procedures in asymptomatic patients (e.g., the United States and Italy), while no CEAs are performed in asymptomatic patients in Denmark. Moreover, the latest Stroke Guidelines now advise against performing CEA in asymptomatic patients in Australia."

This paper noted a 63% reduction in CEA performed in England on asymptomatic patients between 2011 and 2017.

The Choosing Wisely Project aims to identify low-value procedures and CEA in asymptomatic individuals with carotid stenosis >50% was in the top 5 for Australian/New Zealand Choosing Wisely Neurology Procedures. The : "Don't routinely recommend surgery for a narrowed carotid artery (>50% stenosis) that has not caused symptoms."

Everyman is asymptomatic. He has had no symptoms from the obstruction in his carotid artery. There is no mention of stroke symptoms in the book and it must be assumed that Everyman, like thousands of Americans, is getting an unwarranted routine annual carotid ultrasound, the noninvasive test which allows the identification of asymptomatic plaque build-up.

It is important to note that many guidelines mention that CEA only makes sense in the asymptomatic patient if the preoperative risks of stroke, death, and MI are less than 3%.

For a patient or referring physician to make an informed decision, therefore, they would need to know the surgical outcomes for the surgeon doing the procedure. In the real world, almost no one has this data.

The reason surgery for carotid blockages seems less helpful over the last 2 decades is similar to the reason that coronary artery stenting and bypass surgery is less helpful: improved medical control of atherosclerosis with lipid-lowering therapy, blood pressure control, and lifestyle changes including cigarette smoking cessation.

Unfortunately, we have no idea what medical therapy Everyman was getting. Given that statins were in widespread use by the mid-90s and given his history of coronary bypass surgery, he should have been on the most potent one available.

More Unnecessary Coronary Procedures

The year after his carotid artery surgery, Everyman "had an angiogram in which the doctor discovered that he'd had a silent heart attack on the posterior wall because of an obstructed graft." Given that Everyman mentions no symptoms related to this and given the previous inappropriately aggressive test and procedure ordering of his doctors, I can only presume that this repeat invasive angiogram was done because of an abnormal stress test.

Cardiology guidelines now recommend against the routine performance of stress tests following stenting or bypass procedures which I have discussed in detail . This practice was the norm 20 years ago and persists to this day. A major concern with these routine tests is downstream testing like .

When inappropriate invasive angiograms are performed, coronary blockages are often found and stents are frequently placed that don't reduce the risk of heart attack or help symptoms. Sure enough, Everyman has a stent implanted in his left anterior descending coronary artery, one which was not involved with the posterior wall of the heart at all.

The next year he gets another coronary stent, this time in a bypass graft. A year later he gets three more coronary stents. Again, no symptoms mentioned, no benefit obtained, other than to the pocketbook of the stenting doctor.

A Final Carotid Ultrasound Followed by Lethal Carotid Surgery

As we reach page 156 of this 182-page novella, Roth writes "When he next went to the hospital for the annual checkup on his carotids, the sonogram revealed that the second carotid was now seriously obstructed and required surgery."

As suspected, one of Everyman's doctors has been ordering a routine annual . Often, significant asymptomatic carotid stenosis is identified in screening studies prior to coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). There are no good randomized trials to guide management of such cases. Some carotid stenoses are operated on simultaneously with the CABG, some sequentially and in lesser degrees, like Everyman's are managed medically.

Outside the U.S., international organizations are pretty unanimous in condemning the routine screening of asymptomatic patients with carotid ultrasound.

So, yes, Everyman was caught in the cycle of repetitive low-value annual carotid screening and it finally caught up with him.

Everyman requests general anesthesia "so as to make the surgery easier to bear than it had been under local anesthesia with the first operation."

Roth writes "He went under feeling far from felled, anything but doomed, eager yet again to be fulfilled, but nonetheless, he never woke up. Cardiac arrest. He was no more, free from being, entering into nowhere without even knowing it. Just as he'd feared from the start."

The fate of Everyman is not unique. How can today's patients avoid or minimize this carousel of cardiovascular testing, invasive procedures, and potentially lethal operations?

Lesson For Patients

  • Decline low-value screenings like annual routine ECGs or screening carotid ultrasounds
  • Strongly consider obtaining a second opinion when an invasive vascular procedure or major operation is recommended to you, especially if you are free of symptoms
  • Ask your doctor why he is ordering imaging tests; how will the results change his treatment?
  • Remember that just because it seems logical to mechanically remove localized blockages in the arteries to our head or brain, the process of atherosclerosis which caused those blockages is diffuse and the optimal approach is most often a systemic medical one

Anthony C. Pearson, MD, is a noninvasive cardiologist and professor of medicine at St. Louis University School of Medicine. He blogs on nutrition, cardiac testing, quackery, and other things worthy of skepticism at , where a first appeared.