| Literature DB >> 26797032 |
Marcin Koć1, Maciej Kostrubiec1, Waldemar Elikowski2, Nicolas Meneveau3, Mareike Lankeit4, Stefano Grifoni5, Agnieszka Kuch-Wocial6, Antoniu Petris7, Beata Zaborska8, Branislav S Stefanović9, Thomas Hugues10, Adam Torbicki11, Stavros Konstantinides12, Piotr Pruszczyk13.
Abstract
Our aim was the assessment of the prognostic significance of right heart thrombi (RiHT) and their characteristics in pulmonary embolism in relation to established prognostic factors.138 patients (69 females) aged (mean±sd) 62±19 years with RiHT were included into a multicenter registry. A control group of 276 patients without RiHT was created by propensity scoring from a cohort of 963 contemporary patients. The primary end-point was 30-day pulmonary embolism-related mortality; the secondary end-point included 30-day all-cause mortality. In RiHT patients, pulmonary embolism mortality was higher in 31 patients with systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg than in 107 normotensives (42% versus 12%, p=0.0002) and was higher in the 83 normotensives with right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) than in the 24 normotensives without RVD (16% versus 0%, p=0.038). In multivariable analysis the simplified Pulmonary Embolism Severity Index predicted mortality (hazard ratio 2.43, 95% CI 1.58-3.73; p<0.0001), while RiHT characteristics did not. Patients with RiHT had higher pulmonary embolism mortality than controls (19% versus 8%, p=0.003), especially normotensive patients with RVD (16% versus 7%, p=0.02).30-day mortality in patients with RiHT is related to haemodynamic consequences of pulmonary embolism and not to RiHT characteristics. However, patients with RiHT and pulmonary embolism resulting in RVD seem to have worse prognosis than propensity score-matched controls.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26797032 DOI: 10.1183/13993003.00819-2015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671