Journal Information
Vol. 44. Issue S1.
Pages S38 (October 2022)
Share
Share
Download PDF
More article options
Vol. 44. Issue S1.
Pages S38 (October 2022)
PEDIATRIC HEMATOLOGY ABSTRACT CATEGORIESCOAGULATION AND FIBRINOLYSIS DISORDERS
Open Access
THE SUCCESSFUL MAJOR SURGERY IN A PATIENT WITH INHERITED FVII DEFICIENCY AND A HUGE NASOPHARYNGEAL ANGIOFIBROMA
Visits
556
Aysegul Unuvar1, Levent Aydemir2, Mehmet Barburoglu3, Sifa Sahin1, Mustafa Bilici1, Deniz Tugcu1, Gulsah Tanyildiz1, Zeynep Karakas1, Serap Karaman1
1 İstanbul University, İstanbul School of Medicine, Division of Pediatric Hematology&Oncology
2 Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery
3 Department of Radiology, Division of Neuroradiology
This item has received

Under a Creative Commons license
Article information
Special issue
This article is part of special issue:
Vol. 44. Issue S1
More info
Objective

The bleeding phenotype of patients with inherited FVII deficiency is variable, and epistaxis is one of the most frequent symptoms. Interestingly, the bleeding risk does not correlate with the level of FVII activity. The severity of FVII deficiency and the type of surgery are not determinants of the optimal management of surgery, the doses and the duration of rFVIIa therapy are widely variable. The aim of this study is to present our successful experience in a 16-year-old boy with inherited FVII deficiency and a huge nasopharyngeal angiofibroma with a very high risk of bleeding

Case report

The patient was referred with recurrent epistaxis in the last 6 months and he was diagnosed as an inherited FVII deficiency (FVIIC:29%, FVII inhibitor negative with positive family history). Tranexamic acid (10days) and rFVIIa (2doses) were used with success in the management of this surgery. Since this surgery may cause life-threatening bleeding, endovascular particle embolization was done to the important vessels feeding the mass one day before surgery without rFVIIa support. No bleeding or thrombosis were observed in our patient.

Conclusion

In conclusion, a life-threatening major surgery was successfully done for a patient with inherited FVII deficiency and a huge angiofibroma. However, perioperative management of patients with FVII deficiency still remains a major challenge and clinical trials are needed to provide evidence-based optimal management of surgeries. And, angiofibroma should be thought in the differential diagnosis of epistaxis.

Full text is only aviable in PDF
Idiomas
Hematology, Transfusion and Cell Therapy
Article options
Tools