Background
Definition
Autosomal dominant heritable disease resulting in a syndrome of artero-venous malformations in the skin (telangiectasia), lungs, brain, gut that predisposes to significant, life-threatening bleed
Also known as Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome
Pathophysiology
Two most common genes are ENG and ECVRL1 , followed by SMAD4
Epidemiology
Prevalence of 1:10,000 in North America, though likely underdetected
Risk Factors
Clinical Manifestations
History, focusing on epistaxis , bleeding, anemia , polycythemia , cardiac/respiratory/hepatic/neurologic diseases
Physical exam
Oxygen saturation, including orthodeoxia
Telangiectasis on fingerstips, tongue, oropharynx, cheeks, conjunctiva
Liver bruits
High-output heart failure , from arteriovenous malformations in the liver
Differential Diagnosis
Investigations
Labs
CBC and ferritin , for anemia
Genetic testing for ENG and ECVRL1
Imaging
Contrast echocardiography for pulmonary shunt
If negative, repeat every 5 years
If positive, proceed to CT chest every 5 years
Assesses location and size of AVMs
Risk of new lesions goes down with age
Head MRI for cerebral AVMs once, preferably in infancy
Abdominal ultrasound or CT for hepatic AVMs
Diagnosis
Nosebleeds (95%), usually starting in childhood occurring spontaneously and recurrently
Telangiectases (95%), usually starting in young adulthood
Lips, hands, and oral/nasal/gastric mucosa
Blanchable, pink-red, and punctuate
Ischemic stroke and brain abscesses, secondary to pulmonary shunting
Visceral AVMs
Upper GI bleeds (25%), usually after age 50
Cerebral AVMs (10%), present at birth
Pulmonary AVMs causing detecable shunt in about half
Hepatic AVMs, often asymptomatic
Spinal AVMs, rarely
First-degree relative meeting the above criteria
Definite diagnosis when three or more of the above findings are present; possible/suspected when two findings are present
Management
Principles
Treat telangiectases/AVMs of skin, oral, GI, and liver symptomatically
Treat AVMs in lungs and brain prophylactically
Screen family members
Screening
One-time screen with MRI and contrast echo
If contrast echo shows shunt, CT scan to assess AVMs
Possible abdominal ultrasound or CT if suspicious for liver AVMs
Follow-up
Annual evaluation to screen for new symptoms
Periodic CBC for anemia
Every 5 years, reassess for PAVMs with CT (if previous AVMs) or contrast echo (it not)
Screening for GI polyps in SMAD4 -positive patients
Prophylaxis
Always use IV with air filter
If contrast echo positive for shunt, requires antibiotics with dental procedures
Avoid antiplatelet medications
Treatment
Nosebleed
Humidification and daily nasal lubricants
Laser ablation, if mild to moderate
Surgical treatment, if severe and refractory to above
Avoid electric and chemical cautery
Avoid embolization
Oral contraceptive pill may decrease bleeding risk
GI bleeding
Transfuse as needed
Endoscopy or push enteroscopy
Some small bowel sites may be amenable to surgical resection
Anemia
Aggressive iron replacement, targetting a ferritin of greater than 50-100
Pulmonary AVMs
Any >1-3mm should be considered for transcatheter embolization
Follow-up CT at 6-12 months, then 5-yearly
Cerebral AVMs
If >1cm, should be treated with neurosurgery, embolization, or stereotactic radiation
Hepatic AVMs