• De novo portal venous thrombosis can compromise long term allograft outcomes. • Complete resolution can be successfully achieved with medical management only. • Surgical interventions should be reserved for early thrombosis with threatened grafts. While portal vein thrombosis (PVT) is well described in patients with cirrhosis, no guidance on de-novo cases following liver transplantation (LT) exists. We describe our experience with new-onset PVT in liver allografts post-LT. Transplant recipients between 2002 and 2024 were reviewed from an institutional database excluding patients with pre-LT PVT. Early (30 days of LT) PVT was defined accordingly. Out of 2273 LTs, PVT occurred in 32 recipients (age 51 ±11 years; early n=15; late n=17). Median time to PVT was 42 days (range 3– 5042 days). Complete thrombus resolution was achieved following re-transplantation (n=4) and surgical thrombectomy (n=3). Venoplasty (n=1) and stenting (n=1) were performed for late PVT events. Using anticoagulation-only strategies, complete resolution was achieved in 16/17 recipients. The remaining 6 did not receive any medical or surgical intervention. Both 1-, 3- and 5-year overall (p<0.05) and graft survival (p=0.02) were lower in LT recipients with de novo PVT when compared to non-PVT cases. Although infrequent, PVT post-LT is a difficult clinical scenario with no clear treatment algorithm in the transplant literature. Non-operative management is feasible, however, surgical and radiological interventions are merited for LT recipients with compromised allograft function.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Ola Ahmed
Maggie Minett
Neeta Vachharajani
Journal of Liver Transplantation
Washington University in St. Louis
Barnes-Jewish Hospital
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Ahmed et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699fe3af95ddcd3a253e7c19 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.liver.2026.100335