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Portal hypertension is the most common complication in patients with end-stage liver cirrhosis. Portal hypertension-related complications, such as variceal bleeding, often lead to a poor prognosis. Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) is an effective treatment strategy for managing portal hypertension-related variceal bleeding. However, the appropriate diameter of the covered stent during the TIPS procedure remains a subject of debate. To date, there is a lack of strong evidence regarding the most suitable covered stent diameter.
In theory, a shunt with a larger diameter can result in better stent patency, but it can also lead to reduced liver function and a higher incidence of hepatic encephalopathy (HE) after the TIPS procedure. Therefore, the choice of covered stent diameter needs to consider the factors of shunt efficacy and postoperative liver function. At present, the diameters of TIPS-dedicated stents are typically either 8 or 10 mm. Whether stents with these two diameters can meet all the requirements of TIPS procedures is currently unknown. Different races, cirrhosis etiologies, and liver volumes may require different TIPS diameters. For example, in China, most cases of liver cirrhosis are caused by hepatitis B, resulting in the patient having a smaller liver volume. Therefore, in most Chinese studies, the diameters of TIPS stents are mainly 8 mm. Previous studies have shown that TIPS with an 8-mm covered stent has a shunt effect similar to that of a 10-mm covered stent; however, the incidence of postoperative HE is significantly reduced with an 8-mm stent (27% vs. 43%)14. Nevertheless, an 8-mm covered TIPS still has a high incidence of HE.
The residual liver volume is small for patients with severe atrophic cirrhosis of the liver, and whether this necessitates a covered TIPS with a smaller diameter requires further study. However, there is still no dedicated TIPS stent that is <8 mm in diameter. In this study, we propose an innovative strategy for the creation of a 6-mm shunt to determine if it can achieve a shunt effect similar to that of an 8-mm covered TIPS and reduce the incidence of HE in patients with severe atrophic liver cirrhosis.
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Malignant tumor (including hepatocellular carcinoma) or other diseases that will shorten the life span of patients.
Cavernous portal vein
Non-cirrhotic portal hypertension (Budd-Chiari syndrome, extrahepatic portal vein obstruction, idiopathic portal hypertension, etc.)
Spontaneous dominant hepatic encephalopathy 5 congestive heart failure or severe valvular heart failure
Uncontrollable systemic infection or inflammation 7. Severe pulmonary hypertension 8. Severe renal insufficiency (except hepatogenic renal insufficiency) 9. Rapidly progressing liver failure 10. Contrast agent allergy 11. History of liver transplantation or allogeneic organ transplantation 12. Have a history of TIPS or shunt operation. 13. Pregnancy or lactation 14. Poor compliance 15. Participate in another clinical study.
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120 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Huzheng Yan, doctor; Mingsheng Huang, doctor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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