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. 2007;121(2):153-8.
doi: 10.1016/j.thromres.2007.03.028. Epub 2007 May 17.

Prognostic significance of delays in diagnosis of pulmonary embolism

Affiliations

Prognostic significance of delays in diagnosis of pulmonary embolism

David Jiménez Castro et al. Thromb Res. 2007.

Abstract

Study objective: To investigate the prognostic significance of a diagnostic delay of greater than 1 week after symptom onset in patients with pulmonary embolism (PE).

Design: Prospective cohort study.

Location: Emergency Department of Ramón y Cajal Hospital, a 1500-bed tertiary-care center in Madrid, Spain.

Patients: Diagnosed with PE by objective testing between January 1, 2003, and June 30, 2005.

Interventions: All patients received standard anticoagulation therapy during follow-up.

Endpoints: Death from any cause or symptomatic recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE), confirmed by standard objective testing, within 3 months after PE diagnosis.

Results: Of the 397 patients with acute PE, 72 (18%) had a diagnostic delay while 325 (82%) did not. The all-cause mortality rate was 13.1% at 3 months (95% CI=9.8-16.4%); due to 9 (12.5%) deaths in the diagnostic delay group and 43 (13.2%) deaths in the group without diagnostic delay (OR 0.9; 95% CI=0.4-2.0). Though multivariate analysis of clinical variables at the time of PE diagnosis identified active cancer, heart failure and immobility for more than 4 days as independent risk factors for death, diagnostic delay was not predictive. Recurrent VTE was observed in 3 (4.2%) of 72 patients with diagnostic delay and in 15 (4.6%) of 325 patients without diagnostic delay (odds ratio: 0.9; 95% CI=0.2-3.2). None of the variables analysed, including diagnostic delay, was associated with an increased risk of recurrent VTE during follow-up.

Conclusions: Among survivors diagnosed with acute PE in the Emergency Department, we did not detect an association between a delay in diagnosis and an increased risk of death or VTE recurrence during the ensuing 3 months of treatment.

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