Portal vein thrombosis relevance on liver cirrhosis: Italian Venous Thrombotic Events Registry

Portal vein thrombosis may occur in cirrhosis; nevertheless, its prevalence, and predictors are still elusive. To investigate this issue, the Italian Society of Internal Medicine undertook the “Portal vein thrombosis Relevance On Liver cirrhosis: Italian Venous thrombotic Events Registry” (PRO-LIVER...

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Veröffentlicht in:Internal and emergency medicine 2016-12, Vol.11 (8), p.1059-1066
Hauptverfasser: Violi, Francesco, Corazza, Roberto Gino, Caldwell, Stephen Hugh, Perticone, Francesco, Gatta, Angelo, Angelico, Mario, Farcomeni, Alessio, Masotti, Michela, Napoleone, Laura, Vestri, Annarita, Raparelli, Valeria, Basili, Stefania
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Portal vein thrombosis may occur in cirrhosis; nevertheless, its prevalence, and predictors are still elusive. To investigate this issue, the Italian Society of Internal Medicine undertook the “Portal vein thrombosis Relevance On Liver cirrhosis: Italian Venous thrombotic Events Registry” (PRO-LIVER). This prospective multicenter study includes consecutive cirrhotic patients undergoing Doppler ultrasound examination of the portal area to evaluate the prevalence and incidence of portal vein thrombosis over a 2-year scheduled follow-up. Seven hundred and fifty-three (68 % men; 64 ± 12 years) patients were included in the present analysis. Fifty percent of the cases were cirrhotic outpatients. Viral (44 %) etiology was predominant. Around half of the patients had a mild-severity disease according to the Child–Pugh score; hepatocellular carcinoma was present in 20 %. The prevalence of ultrasound-detected portal vein thrombosis was 17 % ( n  = 126); it was asymptomatic in 43 % of the cases. Notably, more than half of the portal vein thrombosis patients ( n  = 81) were not treated with anticoagulant therapy. Logistic step-forward multivariate analysis demonstrated that previous portal vein thrombosis ( p  
ISSN:1828-0447
1970-9366
DOI:10.1007/s11739-016-1416-8