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Portal hypertension (PHT) is the main consequence of advanced chronic liver diseases (ACLD) and is often associated with severe complications leading to increased morbidity and mortality. Currently, the gold standard for the evaluation of the severity of PHT is the hepatic venous-pressure gradient (HVPG). The disadvantage of using the HVPG, besides the availability of the technique only in referral centres, is in the case of patients with vascular liver disorders because the HVPG underestimates the severity of PHT. Recent studies have evaluated the feasibility of the pressure gradient measurement through endoscopic transgastric and transhepatic access using special kit with a 25-gauge FNA needle (Cook Medical, Winston-Salem, NC, USA) and a compact manometer (Cook Medical, Bloomington, Ind, USA) that has the disadvantage of high purchase cost, no tracing of pressure possible and has not yet been properly correlated with the gold standard HVPG measurement or PPG measurement thus limiting its use in current practice. The aim of the study is 1. to assess and compare the correlations in the porto-systemic gradient measurement between a) direct portal vein puncture during TIPS insertion, b) direct portal and hepatic pressure measurements using a 22 Gauge FNA needle during endoscopic ultrasound procedure and c) indirect portal vein pressure measurements using the interventional radiology based hepatic HVPG procedure in patients with cirrhosis submitted to TIPS procedure for complications of portal hypertension and 2. To evaluate and compare the porto-systemic gradient obtained by direct portal and hepatic pressure measurements using a 22 Gauge FNA needle during endoscopic ultrasound and indirect measurement through HVPG measuring in patients with presinusoidal hypertension and those with portal vein thrombosis.
Full description
Number of patients needed to be included:
To achieve the first primary objective, the investigators will include 20 patients. To achieve the second primary objective, 30 patients will be included, with presinusoidal portal hypertension and patients with non-cirrhotic portal vein thrombosis or portal vein thrombosis in the context of cirrhosis. As non-cirrhotic portal hypertension is a lesser frequent type of portal hypertension, the number needed to be included will be sufficient.
Duration of the Study and Patient Participation:
Patient enrolment is expected to be completed within 24 months of study initiation. Total study duration is expected to be 26 months. Patients are expected to participate in this study for 7 days after the study procedure. Patients who meet one or more exclusion criteria during evaluation with EUS will be followed through procedural timepoint.
Patient Consent Patients who meet the inclusion criterion and none of the exclusion criteria will be invited to participate in this study. Patients eligible for enrolment will have the clinical study explained to them and each patient who agrees to participate will sign and date an informed consent document prior to the procedure or any study-specific testing or assessments.
Methods:
A. General anesthesia B. HVPG measurements will begin prior to TIPS procedure. Before the TIPS placement, standard HVPG measurement will be performed according to the practice standard of care after administration of broad-spectrum prophylactic antibiotics 1 hour prior to procedure. Briefly, the patients will be placed in the angiography room in supine position and the '0' from the arterial pressure measurement kit will be placed at the mid axillary line and pressures will be zeroed. Then, under ultrasound guidance, the right internal jugular vein will be catheterized with a 10 Fr introducer. Thereafter, with a 7Fr balloon-occluded catheter, the right atrium and the inferior retrohepatic vena cava pressures will be recorded. Using the same catheter, the right or the middle suprahepatic vein will be catheterised and 2 ml of iodine contrast will be injected to ensure adequate occlusion after inflation of the balloon. If collaterals are present, they will be recorded. The wedge pressure (WHVP) will be measured in triplicate and, after 1min and 30 seconds and until stabilization, the pressures will be recorded. The free hepatic venous pressure (FHVP) will be measured at the level of the IVC ostium.
C. Direct FHVP and Portal pressure measurement during EUS procedure. Using EUS guidance, assessment of esophageal and/or gastric varices will be performed, as indicated for each case. The patients will be evaluated for possible local direct puncture contraindications. If no contraindications will be found, the free hepatic vein pressure and portal pressure will be measured through direct puncture of the vessels, left or medial hepatic vein and portal vein, respectively. The puncture will use a 22 G FNA Needle and 1 ml of heparinized saline will be flushed to confirm the good puncture location. Thereafter, the needle will be connected to the hemodynamic pressure measurement kit and the pressures will be recorded D. Direct portal pressure measurement during TIPS procedure. The portal pressure will be measured after the direct puncture of the portal vein during TIPS procedure before angioplasty and stent placement. Thereafter, the TIPS procedure will proceed as standard of care.
2.2.Study 2. Patients with presinusoidal portal hypertension or portal vein thrombosis: In this study the investigators will assess the correlation of the PPG obtained by direct portal and hepatic pressure measurements using a 22 Gauge FNA needle during endoscopic ultrasound under mild sedation procedure and portal hypertension signs in patients with presinusoidal portal hypertension and those with cirrhotic or non-cirrhotic portal vein thrombosis.
A. Patients will undergo HVPG measurement under no sedation B. Direct FHVP and Portal pressure measurement during EUS procedure as outlined above will be performed under mild sedation
All measured pressures will be recorded as source documentation and will be reviewed by an independent physician for quality with vast experience in HVPG pressure tracings
Follow-up: same day of the procedure; at 24-48 hours; at 1 week- assessment of complications
Safety Reporting:
All adverse events and device deficiencies identified by the investigator as being relevant to any of the procedures (e.g. HVPG, TIPS, EUS procedure) that occur after the point of enrolment until the last day of patient participation up to 7 days after the study procedure, will be reported by the investigators in special CRFs.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
patients with cirrhosis undergoing TIPS placement and patients with presinusoidal portal hypertension and patients with portal vein thrombosis
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Oana M Nicoara Farcau, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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