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1288 w w w . j o u r n a l s . v i a m e d i c a . p l / k a r d i o l o g i a _ p o l s k a Correspondence to:

Anna Migdał, MD, Cardiology Department, The Children’s Memorial Health Institute,

Dzieci Polskich 20, 04–730 Warszawa, Poland, phone +48 22 815 12 92, e-mail: a.migdal@ipczd.pl Copyright by the Author(s), 2021 Kardiol Pol. 2021;

79 (11): 1288–1289;

DOI: 10.33963/KP.a2021.0096 Received:

July 3, 2021 Revision accepted:

August 30, 2021 Published online:

August 31, 2021

„ C l i n i C a l v i g n e t t e

Pulmonary arterial hypertension secondary to congenital extrahepatic portosystemic shunt — a serious complication of a rare disease

Anna Migdał

1, 2

, Adam Koleśnik

2

, Małgorzata Żuk

1

, Grażyna Brzezińska-Rajszys

2

1Cardiology Department, The Children’s Memorial Health Institute, Warszawa, Poland

2Cardiovascular Interventions Laboratory, The Children’s Memorial Health Institute, Warszawa, Poland

Congenital extrahepatic portosystemic shunt (CEPSS) also known as Abernethy malforma- tion, resulting from the embryonic develop- ment of the portal vein, is a rare condition in which splanchnic venous flow bypasses the liver. Volume overload, microthrombosis, and prolonged exposure to vasoactive substances that are normally metabolized by the liver are factors which lead to pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) [1, 2].

A four-year-old girl was admitted to the Cardiology Department due to suspicion of pulmonary hypertension. She had been diag- nosed prenatally with the absence of venous duct and direct connection of umbilical vein to the right atrium causing fetal heart failure requiring transplacental digoxin treatment.

On admission, she was in World Health Organization Functional Class (WHO-FC) II with the oxygen blood saturation of 97%.

Echocardiography revealed elevated right ventricular systolic pressure (RVSP) to 45 mm Hg. The N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic pep- tide (NT-proBNP) level was low (55 pg/ml, N

<190 pg/ml). The typical diagnostic approach to pulmonary hypertension revealed no ab- normalities. Despite normal transaminases and coagulation values, specific liver tests were performed based on prenatal history. Hy- perammonemia (158 μg/dl, reference range 19–87 μg/dl) and liver ultrasound suggested CEPSS. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) showed a hypoplastic portal vein with hy- poplastic branches, a wide connection vessel between the portal vein and inferior vena cava (Abernethy type IIa) (Figure 1A). The patient was accepted for percutaneous embolization of portosystemic shunt. The procedure was

done from the internal jugular vein approach.

During the balloon occlusion test (temporary shunt closure) (Figure 1B), no changes in the portal vein flow were recorded. On the basis of the diameter of the fully inflated balloon, the size of the implant was selected. Then, using three-dimensional (3D) overlay derived from CT on fluoroscopy (HeartNavigator, Philips Healthcare, Eindhoven, Netherlands) as a roadmap (Figure 1C), Amplatzer Vascular Plug II 16 mm was deployed (Figure 1D). After successful shunt closure, the right cardiac catheterization (Figure 1E) was performed: the mean pulmonary arterial pressure was 37 mm Hg, the mean systemic arterial pressure 53 mm Hg, the capillary wedge pressure 12 mm Hg, pulmonary vascular resistance 4.3 Wood units × m2, the cardiac index 5.83 l/min/m2; the acute vasoreactivity test was negative. PAH due to CEPSS was confirmed and bosentan therapy was initiated. During the follow-up, the ammonia level decreased and normalized 3 months after the procedure. Abdominal ultrasound demonstrated no signs of portal hypertension. Unfortunately, after stable 9 months on single PAH therapy, the pa- tient deteriorated (WHO-FC III, NT-proBNP 4804 pg/ml, RVSP 113 mm Hg) (Figure 1F) and required treatment intensification (sildenafil was added). After 24 months of follow-up, the patient is in the intermediate-risk group (WHO-FC II, NTproBNP 283 pg/ml, RVSP 83 mm Hg) on dual PAH therapy currently without the need for treatment intensification.

PAH is a rare, but serious complication of CEPSS leading to RV failure and death [1, 2]. Percutaneous treatment of CEPSS is feasible and allows normalization of the liver

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1289 Anna Migdał et al., A rare cause of pulmonary arterial hypertension

w w w . j o u r n a l s . v i a m e d i c a . p l / k a r d i o l o g i a _ p o l s k a function after shunt closure [2, 3]; however, the impact on

regression of PAH is not well known. Early diagnosis and shunt closure of CEPSS may prevent the progression or even reverse PAH [4], but in most cases, PAH persisted and required PAH-specific therapies [1–3, 5]. No improvement after early CEPSS closure in this case indicates that volume overload and vasoactive substances may not be the only factors responsible for the development of PAH and the PAH worsening may result from the natural progression of pulmonary vascular disease.

Article information

Conflict of interests: None declared.

Open access: This article is available in open access under Creative Common Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 Interna- tional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license, allowing to download articles and share them with others as long as they credit the authors and the publisher, but without permission to change them in any way or use them commercially. For commercial use, please contact the journal office at kardiologiapolska@ptkardio.pl.

How to cite: Migdał A, Koleśnik A, Żuk M, Brzezińska-Rajszys G. Pul- monary arterial hypertension secondary to congenital extrahepatic

portosystemic shunt — a serious complication of a rare disease. Kardiol Pol. 2021; 79(11): 1288–1289, doi: 10.33963/KP.a2021.0096.

REFERENCES

1. Ohno T, Muneuchi J, Ihara K, et al. Pulmonary hypertension in patients with congenital portosystemic venous shunt: a previously unrecognized association. Pediatrics. 2008; 121(4): e892–e899, doi: 10.1542/peds.2006- 3411, indexed in Pubmed: 18362102.

2. Bernard O, Franchi-Abella S, Branchereau S, et al. Congenital portosystem- ic shunts in children: recognition, evaluation, and management. Semin Liver Dis. 2012; 32(4): 273–287, doi: 10.1055/s-0032-1329896, indexed in Pubmed: 23397528.

3. Uike K, Nagata H, Hirata Y, et al. Effective shunt closure for pulmonary hypertension and liver dysfunction in congenital portosystemic venous shunt. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2018; 53(4): 505–511, doi: 10.1002/ppul.23944, indexed in Pubmed: 29359418.

4. Bobhate P, Garg S, Sharma A, et al. Congenital extrahepatic portocaval malformation: rare but potentially treatable cause of pulmonary hyper- tension. Indian Heart J. 2021; 73(1): 99–103, doi: 10.1016/j.ihj.2020.12.015, indexed in Pubmed: 33714417.

5. Wu J, Lu Yi, Zhao W, et al. Clinical characteristics and therapeutic outcomes of pulmonary arterial hypertension secondary to congenital portosystem- ic shunts. Eur J Pediatr. 2021; 180(3): 929–936, doi: 10.1007/s00431-020- 03817-y, indexed in Pubmed: 33011830.

Figure 1. A. Computed tomography of the abdomen shows a large shunt (asterisk) between extrahepatic PV and VCI. B. Angiography through an inflated balloon (16 mm) catheter (asterisk) positioned across the shunt shows intrahepatic portal veins (arrow). C. Fluoroscopy fusion with CT derived model of the shunt (violet struc- ture) — control angiography through the long sheet to confirm position. D. Amplatzer Vascular Plug II (arrow) positioning based on CT derived model overlay.

E. Peripheral angiography shows decreased arboriza- tion of pulmonary arteries. F. Echocardiography: the enlarged right ventricle and the right atrium, the left ventricle compressed

Abbreviations: CT, computed tomography; PV, portal vein; VCI, vena cava inferior

A B

C D

E F

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