Clinical Characteristics and Impact of May-Thurner Syndrome in Patients With Proximal Deep Vein Thrombosis: Insights From the RIETE Registry

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/38238
DOI: 10.1177/00033197251392650
ISSN: 1940-1574
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2025-11Department
Cirugía; MedicinaSource
Angiology (2025)Abstract
May-Thurner syndrome (MTS) is an anatomical variant involving compression of the left iliac vein, predisposing to proximal
deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Despite its clinical significance, population-level data remain limited. Using the RIETE (Registro
Informatizado Enfermedad Trombo-Embólica) registry (2009-2024), we analyzed proximal DVT patients who underwent
advanced imaging (CT-venography, contrast-venography, or MRI). Among 2872 patients with advanced imaging-confirmed
proximal DVT, 124 (4.3%) had MTS. MTS patients were more likely to be female (78% vs 52%), younger (mean age 42 vs
62years), and to present with left-sided DVT (92% vs 46%). They had fewer comorbidities, but greater exposure to estrogen
or pregnancy. Endovascular therapy was more frequently used in MTS patients (44% vs 3.5%), who also received longer median
anticoagulation (365 vs 164days). Despite this, MTS patients had a significantly higher rate of recurrent DVT (rate ratio: 2.37;
95% CI 1.09-4.70). Multivariable analysis confirmed MTS as an independent predictor of recurrent DVT (adjusted hazard
ratio: 2.26; 95% CI: 1.02-5.01). Major bleeding was non-significantly less frequent (rate ratio: 0.42; 95% CI: 0.13-1.04), though
retroperitoneal bleeding was more common. MTS is underdiagnosed, has distinct clinical features and is associated with
increased DVT recurrence despite aggressive therapy. Improved recognition and tailored management strategies are needed.
Subjects
venous thromboembolism; proximal deep vein thrombosis; May-Thurner syndrome; endovascular therapy; anticoagulationCollections
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