THROMBOLYSIS AND ENDOVASCULAR STENT PLACEMENT FOR INFERIOR VENA CAVAL THROMBOSIS IN A LIVER TRANSPLANT RECIPIENT

Abstract
Vascular complications remain an important cause of postoperative morbidity in liver transplant patients. Herein, we present an unusual case of nonanastomotic inferior vena cava (IVC) stenosis in a patient with a“piggyback” caval anastomosis. A 59-year-old woman underwent liver transplantation using a piggyback IVC anastomosis. Her postoperative course was complicated by IVC thrombosis. Catheter-directed thrombolysis, followed by balloon angioplasty and intravascular stent placement, was used to recanalize the IVC and treat a severe retrohepatic IVC stenosis. After 46 hr of catheter-directed urokinase infusion, there was clot lysis and identification of a severe stenosis in the retrohepatic IVC. The lesion was extremely resistant to balloon dilatation alone and a 22-mm-diameter intravascular stent was placed. Simultaneous dilatation of three high-pressure balloons was necessary for maximal stent expansion. The patient remains asymptomatic with no evidence of IVC compromise through 20 months of follow-up. IVC stenosis and thrombosis after liver transplantation may be treated favorably in some patients using catheter-directed thrombolytic therapy followed by balloon dilatation and/or stent placement.