EASL postgraduate course report: Vascular biology in chronic liver disease and clinical management implications
Pierre-Emmanuel Rautou, Ton Lisman, Virginia Hernandez-Gea, Cristina Ripoll

TL;DR
This paper summarizes a postgraduate course on vascular biology in chronic liver disease, focusing on hemostasis, vascular disorders, and complications like portal hypertension.
Contribution
The paper provides updated insights into managing vascular complications in cirrhosis and introduces the redefined concept of porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder.
Findings
Haemostatic changes in cirrhosis require careful management to avoid bleeding without routinely correcting lab abnormalities.
Porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder is a newly redefined condition encompassing multiple histological and clinical patterns.
Non-invasive identification of clinically significant portal hypertension is now possible, and TIPS indications have expanded.
Abstract
This article reviews the content of the EASL Congress 2024 postgraduate course on vascular biology in chronic liver disease and its clinical management. It focuses on haemostasis in patients with cirrhosis, vascular liver diseases including porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder and portal vein thrombosis, and portal hypertension and its extrahepatic complications in cirrhosis. Haemostatic changes in cirrhosis coincide with complex shifts between the risks of bleeding and thrombosis, making management decisions challenging. Importantly, laboratory test abnormalities should not be routinely corrected to avoid bleeding. Regarding vascular liver diseases, the term porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder is a recently redefined entity encompassing various overlapping histological patterns (e.g. nodular regenerative hyperplasia, obliterative portal venopathy) and clinical entities (e.g. idiopathic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Disease and Transplantation · Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Organ Transplantation Techniques and Outcomes
