Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt (TIPS) in Portal Hypertension
Portal hypertension is the increased blood pressure within the portal venous system, which can lead to serious complications like variceal bleeding, refractory ascites, and hepatic hydrothorax. TIPS reduces portal hypertension by diverting a portion of the portal blood flow directly into the systemic circulation, thereby decreasing the pressure in the portal venous system
The key indications include recurrent variceal bleeding that is unresponsive to endoscopic or pharmacological treatments, refractory ascites that does not respond to diuretics or repeated paracentesis, and hepatic hydrothorax resistant to medical therapy. Additionally, TIPS may be used in managing Budd-Chiari syndrome, where thrombosis of the hepatic veins leads to increased portal pressure.
Sensitivity was 94% for colorectal cancer and 43% for advanced precancerous lesions.
Specificity (the proportion of people without cancer or advanced precancerous lesions whose test was negative) was 91%.
Positive predictive value (the proportion of positive tests that were true positives for cancer or advanced neoplasia) was 11%.
Negative predictive value (the proportion of negative tests that were true negatives for cancer or advanced neoplasia) was 93%.
The stool DNA test was substantially more sensitive than FIT (94% vs. 67% for cancer; 43% vs. 23% for advanced precancerous lesions), but slightly less specific.