The role of CT liver perfusion in detecting predictors of portal vein thrombosis in patients with compensated and subcompensated liver cirrhosis

Abstract
Portal vein thrombosis is one of the most common complications of liver cirrhosis, the risk factors for which are still not fully understood.Purpose: to develop a prognostic model to determine the likelihood of portal vein thrombosis based on anamnestic, etiological factors, the presence of hepatocellular carcinoma, as well as parameters of CT perfusion of liver tissue.Material and methods. 43 patients with compensated liver cirrhosis (58.1% of men) and 38 patients with subcompensated liver cirrhosis (50% of men) were included in the prospective study. The age of patients in the first group was 52.56 ± 9.62 years, in the second group - 50.95 ± 9.94 years. The number of patients with 1 etiological factor of liver cirrhosis in the study groups was 62.8% and 81.5%, respectively. Type 2 diabetes mellitus was exhibited in 23.3% of patients with compensated liver cirrhosis and in 15.8% of patients with subcompensated liver cirrhosis. The diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma was established in 27.9% of patients with compensated liver cirrhosis and in 18.4% of patients with subcompensated liver cirrhosis. All patients, after the native study, underwent CT perfusion of the liver using a 256-slice Philips ICT apparatus. As a result of postprocessing, the values of arterial, portal, total perfusion and perfusion index of liver tissue were determined. Statistical analysis of the data was carried out using the binary logistic regression method and the construction of ROC curves.Results. A logistic stepwise multivariate analysis showed that an increase in arterial perfusion (p = 0.002) and a decrease in portal perfusion (p = 0.004) were independently associated with portal vein thrombosis in patients with compensated liver cirrhosis, and a history of primary liver cancer (p < 0.001) was a dependent factor in this model. In patients with subcompensated liver cirrhosis, a history of hepatocellular carcinoma (p < 0.001) and a decrease in portal perfusion (p = 0.001) became independent predictors of portal vein thrombosis, male gender (p = 0.029) was a dependent factor in the developed model.Conclusion. CT-perfusion of the liver makes it possible to determine predictors that can be used together with such factors as the presence of hepatocellular carcinoma and gender in the construction of prognostic models to determine the likelihood of portal vein thrombosis in patients with compensated and subcompensated liver cirrhosis. Age, etiological factor and the presence of type 2 diabetes mellitus in the developed models were not statistically significant.