A. Clinical Syndrome [1,2]
- Hepatomegaly (usually with abdominal pain)
- Fluid Retention
- Weight gain >5% of baseline usually due to formation of ascites
- Hepatorenal syndrome pathophysiology is also usually present
- Hyperbilirubinemia - total bilirubin >15mg/dL
B. Etiology / Clinical Setting
- Endothelial damage
- Deposition of Factor VIII and Fibrinogen in Subendothelial Zones
- Occurs primarily in venules; platelet function is thought to be normal in VOD
- Possible relation to HUS / TTP syndromes (but platelet function is abnormal in these)
- Hepatocyte Injury with Necrosis
- Occurs due to obstruction of venous flow in liver
- This obstruction is due to clots in only small venules (not larger vessels)
- Fibrin clots form on damaged endothelial cells and lead to ischemic hepatocyte damage
- Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFa) is produced in large quantities
- Bone Marrow Transplant Setting [2]
- VOD occurs in <5% of autologous transplants
- VOD occurs in ~50% of allogeneic transplants, depending on defining criteria
- Fatal in 98% of patients with severe VOD
- Seen during conditioning regimen as well as after transplant infusion
- Cyclophosphamide, busulfan are particularly associated with VOD
- Patients at High Risk
- Pre-transplant liver disease
- Allogeneic transplants - especially receiving methotrexate for GVHD prophylaxis
- Very high dose pre-transplant and other chemotherapeutic regimens
- Immunosuppressive regimens including cyclosporin and OKT3 and methotrexate
- Irradiation to the liver also causes VOD
- Must distinguish from Graft versus Host disease (GVHD)
- In VOD, there is considerable fluid retention (not seen in GVHD)
- Possible now to predict VOD based on body weight and total bilirubin pre-transplant
- Liver biopsy is dangerous and insensitive for making diagnosis
C. Complications
- Renal Failure (? Hepatorenal syndrome)
- Multiorgan system failure
- Bleeding due to poor synthetic function
- Encephalopathy
D. Treatment
- Heparin
- Given for 10 days, continuous infusion
- Initially 1000U bolus followed by 150U/kg/d x 10 days
- Bleeding risk is very high
- Tissue Plasminogen Activator (TPA)
- 10mg/d x 2 days
- Recent data indicate response within 4 days of beginning TPA
- Bleeding is often seen
- Ursodiol (Actigal®) [3]
- Bile acid (ursodeoxycholic acid) given to patients undergoing Allogeneic BMT for CML
- All patients received induction (preparative) therapy with busulfan + cyclophosphamide
- Ursodiol (300mg bid) versus placebo was given peritransplant
- Ursodiol reduces progression to cirrhosis and failure in various liver diseases
- In BMT, hepatic VOD reduced from 40% to 15% with ursodiol treatment [4]
- Hematologic risk of relapse in this CML cohort was similar with ursodiol versus placebo
- Defibrotide - DNA extract from lung may reduce risk or treat VOD
- Prostaglandin E1 - may have some prophylactic benefits
References
- Miller KB and Graeme-Cook FM. 1996. NEJM. 334(25):1655 (Case Report)
- Copelan EA. 2006. NEJM. 354(17):1813

- Kowdley KV. 2000. Am J Med. 108(6):481

- Essell JH, Schroeder MT, Harman GS, et al. 1998. Ann Intern Med. 128(12):975
