Reuters Health Information: Anticoagulant use linked to better PVT outcomes in cirrhosis patients
Anticoagulant use linked to better PVT outcomes in cirrhosis patients
Last Updated: 2017-05-22
By Anne Harding
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Use of anticoagulant drugs is
associated with improved recanalization and slower progression
of portal vein thrombosis (PVT) in cirrhosis patients, as well
as to a reduced risk of variceal bleeding, according to a new
systematic review and meta-analysis.
�It�s a very provocative paper in the context of liver
cirrhosis,� Dr. Francesco Violi of Sapienza University in Rome,
one of the study�s authors, told Reuters Health in a telephone
interview. There is a perception that patients with cirrhosis
have coagulopathy, he explained, making it risky to treat them
with anticoagulants.
Up to half of patients with cirrhosis develop PVT, which is
an indicator of poor outcome, Dr. Violi and his team note in
their report, online May 4 in Gastroenterology. They compared
recanalization and progression of PVT in patients with cirrhosis
who were on anticoagulants compared to those who were not, and
also looked at variceal and non-variceal bleeding.
The review included eight studies, none of which was
randomized, and 353 patients. Among patients on anticoagulants,
71% underwent recanalization, versus 42% of those on no therapy.
Based on six studies, PVT recanalization was complete in 53% of
patients on anticoagulants and 33% of untreated patients
(p=0.002).
PVT progression occurred in 9% of patients on anticoagulants
versus 33% of those on no treatment (p<0.0001).
In the six studies that reported bleeding, the rate of major
or minor bleeding was 11% in both groups. Patients on
anticoagulants were significantly less likely to have
spontaneous variceal bleeding (2% versus 12%).
�This is consistent with a previous report in non-cirrhotic
PVT showing that anticoagulants protected against variceal
bleeding; the authors suggested that thrombosis reduction could
limit blood pressure increase in the portal circulation and
eventually prevent variceal rupture,� the researchers note.
Clinicians should always check for PVT in their patients
with cirrhosis, Dr. Violi said, pointing out that it is
asymptomatic in 40% of cases. Patients can be treated with
warfarin or low molecular weight heparin, he added, but newer
anticoagulants should be avoided given concerns that they are
associated with GI bleeding.
In his own practice, Dr. Violi added, he prescribes warfarin
to treat PVT.
�This paper suggests the potential usefulness of this
approach, but we need randomized clinical trials,� he said. More
research also needs to be done to understand the mechanism of
disease in PVT, he added, which could lead to strategies for
preventing it in at-risk patients.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2qGU7fQ
Gastroenterology 2017.
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