INTRODUCTION: The hepatopulmonary syndrome has been acknowledged as an important vascular complication in lungs developing systemic hypoxemia in patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension. Is formed by arterial oxygenation abnormalities induced from intrapulmonary vascular dilatations with liver disease. It is present in 4-32% of patients with cirrhosis. It increases mortality in the setting of cirrhosis and may influence the frequency and severity. Initially the hypoxemia responds to low-flow supplemental oxygen, but over time, the need for oxygen supplementation is necessary. The liver transplantation is the only effective therapeutic option for its resolution. AIM: To update clinical manifestation, diagnosis and treatment of this entity. METHOD: A literature review was performed on management of hepatopulmonary syndrome. The electronic search was held of the Medline-PubMed, in English crossing the headings "hepatopulmonary syndrome", "liver transplantation" and "surgery". The search was completed in September 2013. RESULTS: Hepatopulmonary syndrome is classically defined by a widened alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient (AaPO2) on room air (>15 mmHg, or >20 mmHg in patients >64 years of age) with or without hypoxemia resulting from intrapulmonary vasodilatation in the presence of hepatic dysfunction or portal hypertension. Clinical manifestation, diagnosis, classification, treatments and outcomes are varied. CONCLUSION: The severity of hepatopulmonary syndrome is an important survival predictor and determine the improvement, the time and risks for liver transplantation. The liver transplantation still remains the only effective therapeutic.
INTRODUCTION: The hepatopulmonary syndrome has been acknowledged as an important vascular complication in lungs developing systemic hypoxemia in patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension. Is formed by arterial oxygenation abnormalities induced from intrapulmonary vascular dilatations with liver disease. It is present in 4-32% of patients with cirrhosis. It increases mortality in the setting of cirrhosis and may influence the frequency and severity. Initially the hypoxemia responds to low-flow supplemental oxygen, but over time, the need for oxygen supplementation is necessary. The liver transplantation is the only effective therapeutic option for its resolution. AIM: To update clinical manifestation, diagnosis and treatment of this entity. METHOD: A literature review was performed on management of hepatopulmonary syndrome. The electronic search was held of the Medline-PubMed, in English crossing the headings "hepatopulmonary syndrome", "liver transplantation" and "surgery". The search was completed in September 2013. RESULTS:Hepatopulmonary syndrome is classically defined by a widened alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient (AaPO2) on room air (>15 mmHg, or >20 mmHg in patients >64 years of age) with or without hypoxemia resulting from intrapulmonary vasodilatation in the presence of hepatic dysfunction or portal hypertension. Clinical manifestation, diagnosis, classification, treatments and outcomes are varied. CONCLUSION: The severity of hepatopulmonary syndrome is an important survival predictor and determine the improvement, the time and risks for liver transplantation. The liver transplantation still remains the only effective therapeutic.
The hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS) has been acknowledged as an important vascular
complication in lungs due to systemic hypoxemia in patients with cirrhosis and portal
hypertension. Is formed by a clinical triad of arterial oxygenation abnormalities
induced by intrapulmonary vascular dilatations with liver disease. It is present in
4-32% of patients with cirrhosis[14,19]. It was also seen in both genders in
middle-aged patients[17]. HPS
pathogenesis is not well defined, but it is speculated that a combination of factors,
such as an imbalance in the response of vascular endothelin receptors, pulmonary
microvascular remodeling and genetic predisposition, leads to intrapulmonary vascular
dilatation and bacterial translocation[1,10,12,14,17,19].HPS increases mortality in the setting of cirrhosis and may influence the frequency and
severity. Initially the hypoxemia responds to low-flow supplemental oxygen, but over
time, the need for oxygen supplementation is necessary. Currently, no pharmacological
intervention can readily improve arterial oxygenation and alter the course of HPS. Thus,
liver transplantation is the only effective therapeutic option for its
resolution[13,14,17,19].The aim of this review is to update HPS on its clinical manifestation, diagnosis and
treatment.
METHODS
Study identification and selection
The review was performed using electronic search on Medline-PubMed, in English. The
search was performed through www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed and Mesh-term crossing the headings
"hepatopulmonary syndrome", "liver transplantation" and "surgery". The search was
completed in September 2013.
Definition
The diagnostic features of HPS include presence of liver disease or portal
hypertension, an elevated age-adjusted alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient (AaPO2), and
evidence of intrapulmonary vasodilatation[1,2,3,14,17,19]. It is classically defined by a widened alveolar-arterial oxygen
gradient (AaPO2) on room air (>15 mmHg, or >20 mmHg in patients >64 years of
age) with or without hypoxemia resulting from intrapulmonary vasodilatation in the
presence of hepatic dysfunction or portal hypertension [4,17,18]. In the presence of coexisting
cardiac or pulmonary disease, establishing a diagnosis of HPS can be difficult
[19].
Clinical manifestations
Involve respiratory findings associated with chronic liver disease. The insidious
onset of dyspnea, particularly on exertion, is the most common complaint, but is not
specific. Others symptoms may be present as platypnea and
orthodeoxia[5,6]. Spider angiomata are commonly reported but are
frequently seen in cirrhotic patients without HPS. Finally, clubbing and distal
cyanosis, when present in the setting of liver disease or portal hypertension, should
raise suspicion[2]. The majority of
patients with HPS are either asymptomatic, particularly if diagnosed during
evaluation for liver transplantation. Some cases develop the insidious onset of
dyspnea[4,8].
Diagnosis
HPS diagnosis depends initially on the presence of liver disease or portal
hypertension, an elevated age-adjusted alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient
(AaPO2), and evidence of intrapulmonary vasodilatation[7]. It can normally be diagnosed with
non-invasive tests. Its diagnosis is suspected based on history and physical exam;
arterial blood gas analysis should be performed while breathing room air on pulse
oximetry[2,4]. An elevated alveolar-arterial gradient and decrease
in arterial blood gas occurs due to the dilatation of pulmonary vasculature leading
to shunt with ventilation-perfusion mismatch [17].The arterial blood gas reveals an elevated age-adjusted AaPO2 with or
without hypoxemia. In detecting gas exchanges abnormalities, chest radiography and
pulmonary function tests for evaluation the presence of other pulmonary abnormalities
should be performed. The transthoracic microbubble contrast echocardiography is the
preferred screening test for intrapulmonary vasodilatation. Pulmonary angiography,
technetium-labeled macroaggregated albumin scan and chest computerized tomography
could be useful in some specific situations[9,11,14,16,19].
Classification
The ERS Task Force has proposed a classification using arterial oxygen tension
(PaO2) to stage the severity of HPS: PaO2<50 mmHg
indicates very severe; PaO250 <60 mmHg suggests severe; and a PaO2
60 and <80 mmHg corresponds with moderate stages[17].Krowka et al.[7] demonstrated two
angiographic patters: type I, or diffuse, normal vessels or fine diffuse spidery
arterial vascular abnormalities and type II, or focal, more infrequent, consisted of
similar focal arteriovenous communications (Figure
1). Patients with advanced type I or type II, may exhibit a poor response
to oxygen breathing[7].
FIGURE 1
Hepatopulmonary syndrome classifications
Classification ERS Task Force[17]
Arterial oxygen tension (PaO2)
Very severe
<50 mmHg
Severe
≥50 PaO2 <60 mmHg
Moderate
≥60 PaO2 <80 mmHg
Krowka MJ et al. 1992[7]
Angiographic patters
Type I
Diffuse, normal vessels or fine diffuse spidery vascular
abnormalities
Type II
Focal, more infrequent, similar focal arteriovenous
communications
Hepatopulmonary syndrome classifications
Treatment
The oxygen supplementation keeps a mainstay of therapy with a PaO2<60
mmHg or with oxigen desaturation exercise-induced[8,16]. The transjugular
intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) had limit utility in HPS and need more
clinical trials to define the efficacy[15]. There are currently no effective medical therapies for HPS.Hepatopulmonary syndrome algorithm therapeutic proposed by ERS Task Force is detailed
in Figure 2.
Figure 2
Hepatopulmonary syndrome therapeutic algorithm
Hepatopulmonary syndrome therapeutic algorithmLiver transplantation is the only effective established therapy for HPS [4,8]. The total resolution or significant improvement in gas exchange
post-liver transplant is observed in more than 85% of reported patients and arterial
hypoxemia normalization after transplantation is variable and may be superior to one
year [4,19].
Outcomes
The causes of death in patients with HPS were mainly due to complications of
hepatocellular dysfunction and portal hypertension, and correlated with the severity
of hypoxemia. It has been reported that HPS can increase the mortality of patients
with liver cirrhosis, especially in those with severe hypoxemia[6,11,14,19].Mortality after liver transplantation also appears to be higher in patients with HPS
compared to those without. The strongest predictors of post-liver transplantation
mortality were the preoperative PaO2<50 mmHg alone or in combination
with a macroaggregated albumin shunt fraction of 20%[3,8]. A
prospective study found that those with severe HPS (PaO2<50 mmHg) had
an important increase in post-liver transplantation mortality[3].HPS increases mortality and liver transplant outcomes and may worsen in cases of
advanced stages. Therefore, the worldwide centers may improve the increase priority
for liver transplantation in patients with HPS and significant hypoxemia. The MELD
score does not apply and reduce the survival in waiting liver transplant list
patients in those patients that HPS affect decreasing quality of life[3,4,6,8]. Liver transplantation has been considered as the only
therapy established to reverse intrapulmonary vasodilation, but the postoperative
mortality is still high in patients with a partial pressure of oxygen lower than 50
mmHg. A better understanding of the pathophysiological mechanism underlying HPS will
help to better guide its treatment[1,2,17,18].
CONCLUSION
The severity of HPS is an important predictor to determine survival, the better moment
and the risks for liver transplantation. The liver transplantation still remains the
only effective therapeutic modality.
Authors: Bao Luo; Liping Tang; Zhishan Wang; Junlan Zhang; Yiqun Ling; Wenguang Feng; Ju-Zhong Sun; Cecil R Stockard; Andra R Frost; Yiu-Fai Chen; William E Grizzle; Michael B Fallon Journal: Gastroenterology Date: 2005-08 Impact factor: 22.682
Authors: Peter Schenk; Maximilian Schöniger-Hekele; Valentin Fuhrmann; Christian Madl; Gerd Silberhumer; Christian Müller Journal: Gastroenterology Date: 2003-10 Impact factor: 22.682
Authors: Beatriz L G Lima; Alex V C França; Antonio Pazin-Filho; Whemberton M Araújo; José A B Martinez; Benedito C Maciel; Marcus V Simões; João Terra-Filho; Ana L C Martinelli Journal: Mayo Clin Proc Date: 2004-01 Impact factor: 7.616
Authors: Michael B Fallon; Michael J Krowka; Robert S Brown; James F Trotter; Steven Zacks; Kari E Roberts; Vijay H Shah; Neil Kaplowitz; Lisa Forman; Keith Wille; Steven M Kawut Journal: Gastroenterology Date: 2008-06-20 Impact factor: 22.682