A 72-year-old female patient presented with increasing dyspnea of unclear origin classified as New York Heart Association stage III (NYHA III). Using transesophageal echocardiography a patent foramen ovale (PFO) and right heart failure could be diagnosed. Right heart catheterization revealed a large left to right shunt due to an arteriovenous malformation in the liver. Because of additional telangiectasia of the lips the presumptive diagnosis was Rendu-Osler-Weber disease. Typical nosebleeds and other symptoms of the disease were lacking and only two out of four Curaçao criteria were positive; therefore, genetic testing was performed, which verified the clinical diagnosis. Off-label use of the angiogenesis inhibitor bevacizumab was initiated as the therapeutic strategy and led to an improvement in the symptomatic dyspnea.
Keywords: Arteriovenous malformations; Bevacizumab; Dyspnea; Genetic testing; Telangiectasia, hereditary hemorrhagic.