| Literature DB >> 33488878 |
Aaqib H Malik1, Wilbert S Aronow1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Annual health expense of hospital admissions, due to venous thromboembolism including pulmonary embolism, exceeds 10 billion dollars in the United States. Most of these patients still get admitted to the hospital despite the advent of novel oral anticoagulants. Our aim is to show that low-risk pulmonary embolism patients can safely be discharged from the emergency department with similar patient satisfaction and lower length of stay.Entities:
Keywords: home management; mortality; outpatient treatment; pulmonary embolism
Year: 2021 PMID: 33488878 PMCID: PMC7811300 DOI: 10.5114/aoms/99206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Med Sci ISSN: 1734-1922 Impact factor: 3.318
Figure 1PRISMA diagram for studies selection
PE – pulmonary embolism, DVT – deep vein thrombosis, RCT – randomized controlled trial.
Baseline characteristics of studies
| Study, year | Patients ( | Mean age [years] | Males | Follow-up [days] | Criteria used | Previous VTE %age | Cancer patients ( | Follow-up loss ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OTPE, 2011 [ | 339 | 47 | 84 (49) | 14 and 90 | PESI | 18% | 1 | 7 |
| MERCURY PE, 2018 [ | 114 | 49 | 55 (48) | 90 | Hestia | 19% | 7 | 13 |
OTPE – Outpatient Treatment of Pulmonary Embolism, MERCURY PE – Rivaroxaban for Early Discharge of Low Risk Pulmonary Embolism From the Emergency Department.
Figure 2Forest plot: patient satisfaction
Figure 3Forest plot: length of stay in hours
Figure 4Forest plot: recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE)
Figure 5Forest plot: mortality
Exclusion criteria used for low risk pulmonary embolism patients in both trials
| Did not meet inclusion criteria | Were therapeutic on oral anticoagulation |
|---|---|
| High-risk PE patients | Systolic BP < 100 mm Hg |
| Not objectively confirmed PE | Pregnancy |
| < 18 years of age | Severe renal failure |
| PE diagnosed after 23 h | Were previously enrolled in the trial |
| Barriers to adherence/follow-up or non-compliance | Imprisonment |
| Chest pain necessitating parenteral opioids | Cancer diagnosis |
| Could not consent/declined consent | Troponin elevation |
| Hypoxemic | Physicians’ discomfort to enroll |
| Had active bleeding or high risk of bleeding | Medication contraindicated |
PE – pulmonary embolism, BP – blood pressure.
Figure 6Forest plot: major bleeding