| Literature DB >> 26255069 |
Luca Masotti1, Grazia Panigada2, Giancarlo Landini3, Filippo Pieralli4, Francesco Corradi4, Salvatore Lenti5, Rino Migliacci6, Stefano Arrigucci5, Anna Frullini7, Maria Chiara Bertieri8, Stefano Tatini9, Alberto Fortini10, Irene Cascinelli11, Nicola Mumoli12, Stefano Giuntoli12, Alessandro De Palma13, Veronica De Crescenzo14, Michele Piacentini15, Giancarlo Tintori16, Alba Dainelli17, Giuseppa Levantino18, Plinio Fabiani19, Filippo Risaliti20, Roberta Mastriforti21, Michele Voglino22, Valentina Carli23, Simone Meini9.
Abstract
Prognostic stratification of acute pulmonary embolism (PE) remains a challenge in clinical practice. Simplified PESI (sPESI) score is a practical validated score aimed to stratify 30-day mortality risk in acute PE. Whether prognostic value of sPESI score differs according to sex has not been previously investigated. Therefore the aim of our study was to provide information about it. Data records of 452 patients, 180 males (39.8 %) and 272 females (60.2 %) discharged for acute PE from Internal Medicine wards of Tuscany (Italy) were analysed. sPESI was retrospectively calculated. Variables enclosed in sPESI score, all cause in-hospital mortality and overall bleedings were compared between sexes. Moreover, predictive ability of sPESI score as prognosticator of all cause in-hospital mortality was tested and compared between sexes. sPESI score 0 (low risk) was found in 17.7 % of males and 13.6 % of females (p = 0.2323). We didn't find significant difference in sPESI scoring distribution. Age ≥80 years (51.4 vs. 33.8 %, p = 0.0003) and heart rate ≥110 bpm (23.5 vs. 14.4 %, p = 0.0219) were found significantly more prevalent in females, whereas active cancer (23.8 vs. 39.4 %, p = 0.0004) and cardio-respiratory diseases (19.8 vs. 27.7 %, p = 0.0416) were in males. All cause in-hospital mortality was 0 % in both genders for sPESI score 0, whereas it was 5.4 % in females and 13.6 % in males with sPESI score 1-2 (p = 0.0208) and 22 % in females and 19.3 % in males with sPESI score ≥3 (p = 0.7776). Overall bleedings were significantly more frequent in females compared with males (4.77 vs. 0.55 %, p = 0.0189). In females overall bleedings ranged from 2.7 % in sPESI score 0 to 6 % in sPESI score ≥3. Predictive ability of sPESI score as prognosticator of all cause in-hospital mortality was higher in females compared to males (AUC 0.72 vs. 0.67, respectively). In real life different co-morbidity burdens in females compared to males. Females seems to be at lower risk of all cause in-hospital mortality for sPESI score ≤2 but at higher risk of bleeding, irrespective from sPESI scoring. Predictive ability of sPESI score seems better in females.Entities:
Keywords: Acute pulmonary embolism; Female sex; Gender; PESI; Prognosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26255069 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-015-1260-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300