Background: We aimed to identify a noninvasive predictor of portal venous pressure (PVP).
Methods: We directly measured the PVP in 40 consecutive patients who underwent direct percutaneous transhepatic portal vein puncture as part of the therapeutic management for liver diseases, and we evaluated the association of the PVP with noninvasive clinical parameters. The backgrounds of the liver were normal in 13 patients, chronic hepatitis in 17, and liver cirrhosis in ten.
Results: The mean PVP was 202 ± 114 mmH(2)O. In a multivariate linear regression analysis, the serum bile acid level and splenic volume showed independent positive correlations with the PVP (P < 0.001 and 0.002, respectively). The formula for estimating PVP was identified as follows: PVP (mmH(2)O) = serum bile acid (μmol/L) × 2.593 + splenic volume (cm(3)) × 0.416 + 65.929 (R(2) = 0.698). In a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, the AUC values of serum bile acid and splenic volume at a PVP of 200 mmH(2)O were 0.909 and 0.758, respectively. However, the AUC values of serum bile acid and splenic volume at a PVP of 250 mmH(2)O were 0.792 and 0.926, respectively, suggesting that the serum bile acid level and splenic volume are sensitive predictors of early and advanced portal hypertension, respectively.
Conclusions: Combined measurements of the serum bile acid level and splenic volume may be useful to noninvasively assess the PVP prior to further invasive procedures.