4.6 Article

Treatment of bleeding in patients with liver disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 19, Issue 7, Pages 1644-1652

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1111/jth.15364

Keywords

portal hypertension; prothrombin time; platelet transfusion; blood transfusion; antifibrinolytic agents

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Patients with cirrhosis often have complex changes in their hemostatic system. Routine diagnostic tests may not accurately reflect their hemostatic competence and correction of laboratory values for hemostasis is not recommended for bleeding prevention. Prohemostatic therapy is not the first line of management for bleeding patients with cirrhosis.
Patients with cirrhosis frequently have complex alterations in their hemostatic system. Although routine diagnostic tests of hemostasis in cirrhosis (platelet count, prothrombin time, fibrinogen level) are suggestive of a bleeding tendency, it is now widely accepted that these tests do not reflect hemostatic competence in this population. Rather, patients with cirrhosis appear to have a rebalanced hemostatic system with hypercoagulable elements. Therefore, routine correction of hemostasis laboratory values, for example by fresh frozen plasma or platelet concentrates, with the aim to avoid spontaneous or procedure-related bleeding is not indicated as is outlined in recent clinical guidance documents. However, little guidance on how to manage patients with cirrhosis that are actively bleeding is available. Here we present three common bleeding scenarios, variceal bleeding, post-procedural bleeding and bleeding in a critically ill cirrhosis patient, with specific management suggestions. As patients with cirrhosis generally have adequate hemostatic competence and as bleeding complications may be unrelated to hemostatic failure, prohemostatic therapy is not the first line of management in bleeding patients with cirrhosis, even in the presence of markedly abnormal platelet counts and/or prothrombin times. We provide a rationale for the restrictive approach to prohemostatic therapy in bleeding patients with cirrhosis.

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