Anna Maria Ierardi1, Aldo Carnevale2, Giulia Tosetti3, Mario D'Amico4, Melchiore Giganti5, Vincenzo La Mura6, Cristian Bonelli7, Matteo Renzulli8, Pietro Lampertico3,9, Massimo Primignani3, Gianpaolo Carrafiello1,10. 1. Radiology Department, Fondazione IRCCS Cà Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Milan (Anna Maria Ierardi, Gianpaolo Carrafiello). 2. Radiology Department, University Radiology Unit, Sant'Anna University Hospital, Ferrara (Aldo Carnevale). 3. Foundation IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, CRC "A. M. and A. Migliavacca" Center for Liver Disease, Milan (Giulia Tosetti, Massimo Primignani). 4. UOC Radiodiagnostica; Ospedali Riuniti Villa Sofia-Cervello, Palermo (Mario D'Amico). 5. Department of Morphology, Surgery and Experimental Medicine, University of Ferrara (Melchiore Giganti). 6. Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda, Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, U.O.C. Medicina Generale Emostasi e Trombosi, University of Milan (Vincenzo La Mura). 7. Healthcare Professionals Department, Foundation IRCCS Cà Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Milan (Cristian Bonelli). 8. Radiology Unit, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Speciality Medicine, Sant'Orsola Hospital, University of Bologna (Matteo Renzulli). 9. Department of Pathophysiology and Transplantation, University of Milan, Milano, Lombardia (Pietro Lampertico). 10. Department of Health Sciences, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan (Gianpaolo Carrafiello), Italy.
Varices due to portal hypertension are abnormally dilated submucosal veins that can
occur throughout the digestive tract and can lead to life-threatening bleeding.
Variceal hemorrhage is definitely a medical emergency, associated with a mortality
that is still around 10-20% at 6 weeks, despite recent developments and
refinement of technologies and treatment approaches [1,2]. Optimal
management requires a thoughtful, multidisciplinary strategy, including
gastroenterologists or hepatologists, and diagnostic and interventional
radiologists.Esophagogastroduodenoscopy is traditionally considered the first-line diagnostic and
therapeutic tool for bleeding esophageal and gastric varices [1,3]. Without
endoscopic intervention, the risk of rebleeding is almost 60%, with a higher
mortality rate (33%) [4-6]. Rebleeding may be managed by a second
attempt at endoscopy; however, in the case of failure of endoscopic treatment and
severe hemorrhage, a transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) is likely
to be the best strategy [1], in line with
the traditional doctrine of decompressing the hypertensive portal circulation.However, TIPS has not proved to be as effective in treating gastric variceal
hemorrhage as it has in the case of esophageal variceal bleeding [7]. Indeed, in most cases gastric varices are
supplied by a spontaneous splenorenal shunt, and they bleed with a lower
portosystemic gradient than esophageal varices. In this scenario, balloon-occluded
retrograde transvenous obliteration (BRTO) has been gaining popularity in the
scientific literature, especially in Asian countries [6,7].The traditional technique consists of retrograde catheterization of the left renal
vein by the jugular or femoral vein, followed by occlusion through a balloon and
slow infusion of glue to achieve obliteration of the gastro-splenorenal collateral
pathways and gastric fundal varices. This procedure, with variations and possibly
combinations of techniques, has not only proved to be effective in controlling
gastric variceal bleeding, with low recurrence rates, but also reveals some
advantages over TIPS, particularly in terms of hepatic encephalopathy and liver
insufficiency. The effect of the former procedure is the obliteration of a
spontaneous hepatofugal shunt, this being the opposite of the aforementioned
principle of portal decompression. However, BRTO may be challenging or not suitable
in certain settings, as in the case of varices that lack a main draining vein, or in
the presence of portosystemic shunts with complex anatomy. In these circumstances, a
combination of percutaneous transhepatic obliteration (PTO) with BRTO, despite its
greater invasiveness, may be the best strategy [8].In this article, we sought to determine the feasibility, safety and effectiveness of
combined PTO and BRTO therapy for the treatment of patients with high-risk bleeding
gastric varices.
Patients and methods
Patients
From January 2017 to August 2020, 10 patients (9 men and 1 woman; median age 67.5
years) were retrospectively reviewed (Table
1). All the patients had been treated with a combination of PTO and
BRTO. Inclusion criteria were: liver cirrhosis with high-risk bleeding gastric
varices; uncontrolled hepatic encephalopathy; uncontrolled gastric varices
despite previous endoscopic treatment; contrast-enhanced computed tomography
(CECT); and/or endoscopy performed before the procedure for evaluation of
gastric and esophageal varices. Patients with portal vein thrombosis or severe
uncorrected coagulopathy were excluded. Gastric fundal varices were classified
according to the classification system originally proposed by Sarin et
al [9]. Written informed
consent was acquired from all the patients enrolled prior to treatment.
Table 1
Patient and procedure characteristics
Patient and procedure characteristicsThe series was a retrospective cohort study, conducted in accordance with the
Declaration of Helsinki.
Procedure
All procedures were performed in the angiographic suite (GE-Innova 2100-IQ, GE
Healthcare, USA) by two interventional radiologists with more than 10-year
experience in endovascular and percutaneous techniques, with the patient under
conscious sedation and local anesthesia at the puncture site using lidocaine
hydrochloride. All patients received antibiotic prophylaxis according to an
“ultra-short-term antibiotic prophylaxis” scheme with a
preprocedural intravenous injection of 2 g of cefazolin.As planned before the intervention, all patients were treated with a combined
approach: percutaneous access was obtained under fluoroscopic guidance using a
21-G needle (AccuStick System, Boston Scientific) and a 4-5-Fr sheath. In 2
patients, paracentesis was needed before the procedure (within 24 h) to permit a
safe percutaneous liver puncture. Retrograde catheterization of splenorenal
shunts via transvenous femoral or jugular puncture was also performed. In all
cases, gastric varices were visualized by injection of contrast media from the
splenic side; embolization was performed from this side after a super-selective
catheterization of the varices. An occlusion balloon was inflated into the shunt
from the renal side to avoid the migration of the embolic agents into the
systemic circulation (Fig. 1A,B). Embolization was performed with glue in
all cases except for one, in which coils were coated with cyanoacrylate: in this
way, the coils served as a scaffold to which the glue could anchor, in order to
reduce the risk of glue migration. Glue was used in different combinations with
lipiodol, depending on the polymerization time desired: we started by using a
rate of 1:2 and then continued with 1:1. In all cases, glue was delivered via a
2.7-Fr microcatheter (Progreat, Terumo, Japan), and 5-Fr diagnostic catheters,
Cobra C1 or vertebral or ber (Cordis, Miami Lakes, FL, USA) were used to
catheterize the shunts.
Figure 1
Intra-procedural images during embolization with glue (A) and at the end
of the procedure (B)
Intra-procedural images during embolization with glue (A) and at the end
of the procedure (B)In 7 cases, embolization was immediate and the occlusion balloon was deflated at
the end of the procedure; in 3 cases the balloon was left inflated for 4 h to
facilitate hemostasis, and in 2 of these patients an additional occlusion of the
shunt was required and performed with plug.The percutaneous liver approach was closed with a 4-mm AMPLATZER vascular plug
(AVP)-IV (AVP; St. Jude Medical, St. Paul, MN) in 5 cases and with a 5-mm AVP-IV
in 1 case; no embolization of the percutaneous approach was performed in the
remaining cases.Complications were graded as major or minor, following the Society of
Interventional Radiology’s classification system [10].
Follow up
Immediately after the interventional procedure, varices were assessed by direct
portography. Technical success was defined as complete obliteration of the
gastric varices observed during CECT study and endoscopy within 1 month from the
treatment (Fig. 2A-D and Fig. 3A,B). Thereafter, endoscopy was performed every
3 months.
Figure 2
Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan demonstrates enhancing
dilated gastric varices extending to the gastric mucosal surface (white
arrows) (A, B). Contrast-enhanced axial CT images obtained after
embolization show unenhanced fundal gastric varices with embolic
material inside (black arrows) (C, D)
Figure 3
Endoscopic image of the gastric varices, before the treatment (A) and at
1-month follow up after successful treatment (B)
Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan demonstrates enhancing
dilated gastric varices extending to the gastric mucosal surface (white
arrows) (A, B). Contrast-enhanced axial CT images obtained after
embolization show unenhanced fundal gastric varices with embolic
material inside (black arrows) (C, D)Endoscopic image of the gastric varices, before the treatment (A) and at
1-month follow up after successful treatment (B)Clinical success was defined as the absence of gastric varices at high risk of
bleeding during the available follow-up period. The follow-up period for the
recurrence of high-risk gastric varices was calculated from the date of the
procedure until endoscopy or CT showed morphologic recurrence. For endoscopy
that meant the reappearance of swelling gastric varices with signs of high risk
of hemorrhage (hyperemia of the mucosa, initial bleeding). For CT, a
reappearance of vascularized fundal gastric varices was considered as
recurrence. A new combined treatment was considered if endoscopy was not
successful.Follow-up evaluation included the assessment of recurrence of high-risk gastric
varices, complications, and survival rate. In addition, hepatic function tests,
including serum albumin, bilirubin, transaminases, ammonia concentrations, and
prothrombin time at discharge and 15 days after gastric varices obliteration,
were performed during the follow-up period. The survival period was assessed
from the date of the procedure until death or the most recent clinical
visit.
Results
Patient characteristics and procedural data are summarized in Table 1. Twelve sessions of combined PTO and BRTO procedures
were performed in 10 patients. The mean hospital stay after treatment was
4.6±1.5 days. Technical and clinical success was 100%. The mean
follow-up duration was 15.8±5.6 months. During the observation period,
gastric varices recurred in 2 patients and a further combined treatment was
successfully performed. In one of these, endoscopic ligature was attempted first,
but it was not effective.Neither major nor minor procedure-related complications occurred, except for mild
abdominal pain in 2 cases, which resolved in 24 h without any treatment. Esophageal
varices worsened in 2 of 10 patients who underwent endoscopic band ligation. One
patient died 12 months after the combined treatment because of cerebral
hemorrhage.
Discussion
Variceal hemorrhage is a fearful complication of portal hypertension, and represents
a leading cause of mortality in patients with cirrhosis [11]. Although gastric varices carry a lower risk of bleeding
than esophageal varices, they tend to bleed profusely once ruptured, with a higher
mortality rate [8,12]. Several therapeutic modalities are currently available
to treat high-risk gastric varices, including endoscopic procedures, TIPS, PTO and
BRTO. However, the best approach for controlling variceal gastric hemorrhage remains
to be established [8]. Shunting procedures,
either surgical or endovascular, are effective in decompressing portal hypertension,
but may lead to severe complications, mainly hepatic encephalopathy and liver
failure. Moreover, TIPS has not proved to be as effective in controlling gastric
variceal hemorrhage as it has with esophageal variceal bleeding [7], and high-risk varices, such as those in
the gastric antrum, may still be at risk of bleeding even after the portosystemic
gradient has been reduced [13].The available literature suggests that BRTO therapy and its variations may offer an
effective alternative to TIPS in the case of active bleeding, uncontrolled by
medical or endoscopic management, or to prevent re-bleeding, especially in patients
who have appropriate shunts and may otherwise not tolerate TIPS (e.g., those with
refractory hepatic encephalopathy or elderly subjects) [14-16]. Moreover,
BRTO carries the potential advantage over TIPS of increasing portal blood flow and
potentially improving liver function.Broadly speaking, transvenous obliteration of gastric varices can be achieved from
the systemic venous side (draining veins/shunts) or from the portal venous side
(portal afferent feeding vessels). Through the combined approach we have described,
the varices in our series were approached simultaneously from the systemic side by
BRTO and from the portal side by PTO.BRTO is an increasingly accepted, minimally invasive treatment for high-risk gastric
varices, carrying a high technical success rate and a low rate of major
complications [8,11,15,17-22]. The main clinical indications for BRTO are gastric variceal
bleeding (impending, prior or active) and, to a lesser extent, refractory severe
encephalopathy [23]. A metanalysis [12] has shown a pooled clinical success rate
of 97.3% with a low incidence of major complications. Common side effects
reported are minor and temporary, including hematuria, ascites and fever. After the
first description of the technique by Kanagawa et al [24], additional options have been provided to
force retrogradely sclerosant agents into the varices, while occluding the outflow
via a balloon. Indeed, since in many cases the anatomy of gastric varices is complex
because of multiple feeding and draining routes [13], combining anterograde and retrograde approaches is frequently
useful. Alternative routes for transvenous obliteration are often sought, in
addition to the classical transrenal access, since the procedure carries a potential
for many adjuvant techniques and complimentary approaches [17,25].Unfortunately, the BRTO approach is sometimes not suitable or may be
challenging—e.g., if there is no main draining vein, or in the presence of
complex vascular connections. In these cases, PTO, alone or in combination with
BRTO, may represent the best approach, able to achieve a better control of
obliteration of collateral pathways by obstructing both the feeding and the draining
veins of the varices [17]. PTO, first
devised by Lunderquist and Vang in 1974, has been widely performed as an emergency
measure in cases of variceal hemorrhage, aiming to obtain bleeding control through
antegrade embolization via transhepatic puncture [19].In general, PTO is considered an adjunct or an alternative to BRTO, when the latter
fails to obliterate the gastric variceal system, or is technically challenging and
requires additional portal access [26].
Bailout antegrade transvenous obliteration of initially failed or challenged BRTO
has been proven to increase the technical and hemodynamic success rate of
transvenous obliteration of gastric varices from 84-98% (BRTO only approach)
to 98-100% (combined approach) [26].In our series, the combination of the 2 techniques, although obviously more invasive
than BRTO alone, was effective and safe in all cases; notably, the percutaneous
approach allowed us to check for and carefully avoid the retrograde migration of the
embolic agent into the portal vein and/or splenic vein. In our opinion, as
previously reported [27], a combined
strategy, which can obliterate both the feeding and the draining veins with the aim
of forcing the sclerosing agent completely into the varices, may yield better
control of the variceal blood flow than that offered by BRTO or PTO therapy alone.
By this method, the varix is indeed “trapped” simultaneously from the
portal venous side (PTO) and from the transrenal/systemic venous side (BRTO) with
the occlusion balloons. This enables adequate sclerosant distribution.Unlike TIPS, BRTO does not divert portal blood flow from the liver, while it
increases the hepatopetal blood flow by obliterating the hepatofugal shunts [15]. Therefore, though aggravating portal
hypertension, it does not deteriorate liver function and could be preferable in
patients with very advanced cirrhosis or hepatic encephalopathy. Similar changes in
hemodynamics, also expected with combined PTO and BRTO [8], may exacerbate the sequelae of portal hypertension, with
increased incidence or worsening of preexisting esophageal varices and ascites
[11,12]. Thus, early endoscopic follow up is necessary after such
interventional treatments of gastric varices, particularly in patients with
preexisting esophageal varices, and esophageal varices at bleeding risk should be
treated with endoscopic band ligation. Though such possible adverse events are
disappointing, one should consider that the mortality rate for gastric variceal
hemorrhage is higher than that for esophageal variceal bleeding and, in accordance
with Arai et al, should conclude that the expected changes in
portal system hemodynamics caused by the shunt obliteration are still preferable,
since esophageal varices can be controlled more easily by endoscopic thrapy [27].Our work has several limitations, including the retrospective study design and the
limited number of patients; further prospective, randomized, comparative studies
with larger cohorts and a longer follow-up period would assist in clarifying the
effect of combined BRTO and PTO treatment.In conclusion, our preliminary experience shows that combined PTO and BRTO therapy is
feasible, safe and effective in treating uncontrolled gastric varices. This strategy
offers an attractive alternative for patients with high-risk bleeding gastric
varices that cannot be managed otherwise, providing optimal control of the variceal
blood flow.What is already known:Although gastric varices carry a lower risk of bleeding than
esophageal varices, they tend to bleed profusely once ruptured and
have a higher mortality rateThe balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous obliteration (BRTO)
procedure, with variations and possibly combinations of techniques,
has proved to be effective in controlling gastric variceal
hemorrhageWhat the new findings are:Combined percutaneous transhepatic obliteration (PTO) and BRTO
therapy is safe and effectiveIt may rescue cases with otherwise uncontrollable gastric varicesA combined PTO and BRTO approach may provide optimal control of the
variceal blood flow, avoiding migration of the embolic agents
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