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Endovascular therapy reduces post-thrombotic syndrome severity by 2.0 points compared to standard careEndovascular Therapy Improves Quality of Life for Post-Thrombotic Syndrome

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Key Takeaway
Consider endovascular therapy for patients with iliac-vein obstruction to reduce PTS severity despite higher bleeding risk.

This randomized controlled trial included 225 patients with moderate or severe post-thrombotic syndrome and imaging-confirmed iliac-vein obstruction. Participants were assigned to either endovascular therapy, consisting of iliac-vein stent placement and enhanced antithrombotic therapy, or standard post-thrombotic syndrome care alone.

At 6 months, the primary outcome showed a significant reduction in the severity of post-thrombotic syndrome. The endovascular group achieved a Venous Clinical Severity Score (VCSS) of 8.1±5.1 compared to 10.0±4.9 in the standard care group (adjusted difference -2.0, P = 0.001). Secondary outcomes included significant improvements in venous disease-specific quality of life (VIEES) by 14.5 points (P < 0.001) and overall quality of life (SF-36 physical component summary) by 6.1 points (P < 0.001) for those receiving endovascular therapy.

Safety data indicated a higher risk of bleeding in the endovascular therapy group (11.6%) compared to the standard care group (3.6%, P = 0.03). While endovascular therapy improved symptoms and quality of life over 6 months, clinicians should weigh these benefits against the increased bleeding risk. The results are specific to patients with confirmed iliac-vein obstruction.

How this fits prior evidence

How this fits prior evidence: This finding addresses a gap in management for severe cases by showing that endovascular therapy reduces post-thrombotic syndrome severity and improves quality of life compared to standard care. This contrasts with the finding that compression stockings provide only modest PTS reduction after DVT, which was noted as having low certainty and uncertain effects on severe cases.

Researchers conducted a randomized controlled trial involving 225 patients with moderate to severe post-thrombotic syndrome and confirmed iliac-vein obstruction. The study compared standard care against endovascular therapy, which included placing an iliac-vein stent combined with enhanced antithrombotic treatment.

After six months, the results showed that patients receiving endovascular therapy had significantly lower severity scores for their condition compared to those receiving standard care. Additionally, these patients reported better quality of life specifically related to their venous disease and improved overall physical health scores.

While the treatment was effective in reducing symptoms, there was a notable safety finding: the group receiving endovascular therapy had a higher risk of bleeding (11.6%) compared to the standard care group (3.6%). Because these results are based on a six-month follow-up period, patients should discuss these specific risks and benefits with their doctor to determine if this treatment is right for them.

What this means for you:
Endovascular therapy can reduce symptom severity and improve quality of life but carries a higher risk of bleeding.

Common questions

What is endovascular therapy for post-thrombotic syndrome?

In this study, endovascular therapy involved placing an iliac-vein stent and using enhanced antithrombotic treatment. It was compared against standard care for patients with moderate to severe symptoms and confirmed vein obstructions.

Does this treatment improve quality of life?

Yes, the study found that patients who received endovascular therapy reported better scores for both venous disease-specific quality of life and overall physical health compared to those receiving standard care over a 6-month period.

Are there any risks associated with this procedure?

The study noted that patients who received endovascular therapy had a higher risk of bleeding (11.6%) than those who received standard care (3.6%). You should talk to your doctor about these specific risks.

Study Details

Study typeRct
Sample sizen = 225
EvidenceLevel 2
Follow-up6.0 mo
PublishedJun 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
BACKGROUND: Post-thrombotic syndrome is common after deep-vein thrombosis and can cause severe symptoms involving the limbs that impair patients' activity and quality of life. Endovascular therapy can eliminate chronic venous obstruction and is hypothesized to reduce the severity of post-thrombotic syndrome. METHODS: We randomly assigned 225 patients with moderate or severe post-thrombotic syndrome and imaging-confirmed iliac-vein obstruction to receive endovascular therapy (iliac-vein stent placement and enhanced antithrombotic therapy) plus standard post-thrombotic syndrome care or standard post-thrombotic syndrome care alone. The severity of post-thrombotic syndrome at 6 months (the primary outcome) was assessed with the validated Venous Clinical Severity Score (VCSS) tool (scores range from 0 to 30, with higher scores indicating more severe post-thrombotic syndrome) by evaluators who were unaware of the group assignments. Key secondary outcomes included venous disease-specific and overall quality of life. RESULTS: At 6 months, the severity of post-thrombotic syndrome was lower in the endovascular-therapy group than in the no-endovascular-therapy group (mean [±SD] VCSS, 8.1±5.1 vs. 10.0±4.9; adjusted difference, -2.0; P = 0.001). Venous disease-specific quality of life as assessed with the Venous Insufficiency Epidemiological and Economic Study Quality of Life questionnaire was better in the endovascular-therapy group than in the no-endovascular-therapy group at 6 months (adjusted difference, 14.5 points; P<0.001), as was overall quality of life as assessed with the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Status Survey physical component summary score (adjusted difference, 6.1 points; P<0.001); scores on both tools range from 0 to 100. Through 6 months, bleeding was more common in the endovascular-therapy group than in the no-endovascular-therapy group (in 11.6% vs. 3.6% of the patients; P = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: Among patients with moderate or severe post-thrombotic syndrome and iliac-vein obstruction, endovascular therapy led to less severe post-thrombotic syndrome and better health-related quality of life than standard care over a 6-month period but with a higher risk of bleeding. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and others; C-TRACT ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03250247.).
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