Mary A Binko, Elizabeth A Andraska, Katherine M Reitz, Robert M Handzel, Michael J Singh, Natalie D Sridharan, Rabih A Chaer, Eric S Hager
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Portal venous system aneurysms (PVA) are increasingly diagnosed on cross-sectional computed tomography (CT) imaging. However, the natural history of these aneurysms is poorly understood and reports are limited to small case series.
Methods: Terms relevant to PVA were searched in radiology reports (2010-2022) with PVA presence confirmed by manual review. PVA were defined as a diameter greater than 1.5 cm in patients without cirrhosis and 1.9 cm in those with cirrhosis. Aneurysm growth was defined as greater than 20% increase in size while aneurysm regression as greater than 20% decrease in size. Patient demographics, comorbid conditions, and PVA outcomes were abstracted. Univariate statistics were used to compare groups.
Results: Thirty-eight aneurysms with radiographic follow up were identified in 35 patients, involving the portal vein (n=18, 47.4%), splenic vein (n=10, 26.3%), superior mesenteric vein (n=3, 7.9%), and portal confluence (n=7, 18.4%). While 12 (31.6%) were idiopathic, the remaining 26 (68.4%) were associated with portal hypertension (n=20, 52.6%) and prior liver transplant (n=4, 10.5%). The median growth was 0.2 cm (-2.6-2.4 cm) over median follow up over 5.0 years (0.3-16.6). Five (13.2%) PVA regressed and were largely idiopathic (80.0%, p=0.03). Thirteen (34.2%) PVA grew and were associated with portal hypertension (n=11, 84.6%, p=0.003) and thrombosis (n=6, 46.2%, p=0.05). Nine (23.7%) PVA thrombosed, predominantly in males (n=7, 77.8%). The median growth was 1.0 cm (-0.7-1.9 cm). Three patients (33.3%) were symptomatic from PVA thrombosis including abdominal pain (n=2, 22.2%), intestinal ischemia (n=1, 11.1%), and variceal bleeding (n=2, 22.2%). Four (44.4%) patients were treated with anticoagulation. No aneurysms ruptured. Of the 58 PVA initially identified with and without radiographic follow up, 5 (8.6%) underwent intervention with a median diameter of 4.0 cm (3.4-5 cm). Intervention included vein ligation (n=1, 20.0%), aneurysmorrhaphy (n=1, 20.0%) and aneurysmectomy (n=3, 60.0%). There was one case of aneurysm recurrence 20 years following resection and one post-operative mortality.
Conclusion: Two-thirds of PVA, including size greater than 3 cm, remain stable on surveillance. While annual surveillance is initially recommended to confirm PVA stability, interval imaging can be subsequently extended given low growth rates. Over 20% of PVA thrombosed but none ruptured. Although we did not observe any cases of rupture, the devastating consequences of rupture necessitate consideration of surgical intervention for large symptomatic PVA.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Vascular Surgery: Venous and Lymphatic Disorders is one of a series of specialist journals launched by the Journal of Vascular Surgery. It aims to be the premier international Journal of medical, endovascular and surgical management of venous and lymphatic disorders. It publishes high quality clinical, research, case reports, techniques, and practice manuscripts related to all aspects of venous and lymphatic disorders, including malformations and wound care, with an emphasis on the practicing clinician. The journal seeks to provide novel and timely information to vascular surgeons, interventionalists, phlebologists, wound care specialists, and allied health professionals who treat patients presenting with vascular and lymphatic disorders. As the official publication of The Society for Vascular Surgery and the American Venous Forum, the Journal will publish, after peer review, selected papers presented at the annual meeting of these organizations and affiliated vascular societies, as well as original articles from members and non-members.