Association between thrombolytic treatment and the prognosis of hemodynamically stable patients with major pulmonary embolism: results of a multicenter registry
- PMID: 9264496
- DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.96.3.882
Association between thrombolytic treatment and the prognosis of hemodynamically stable patients with major pulmonary embolism: results of a multicenter registry
Abstract
Background: Thrombolytic treatment has been shown to accelerate resolution of major pulmonary embolism and lead to a rapid improvement of right-side hemodynamics. However, the association between these favorable effects and the clinical outcome of patients who have no severe hemodynamic compromise at presentation remains unknown.
Methods and results: The present multicenter registry included 719 consecutive patients with major pulmonary embolism according to clinical, echocardiographic, scintigraphic, and cardiac catheterization criteria. Symptom onset was acute (<48 hours) in 63% of patients. All patients were hemodynamically stable (ie, without evidence of cardiogenic shock) at presentation. Primary thrombolytic treatment (within 24 hours of diagnosis) was given to 169 patients (23.5%), whereas the remaining 550 patients were initially treated with heparin alone. Overall 30-day mortality was significantly lower in the patients who received thrombolytic agents (4.7 versus 11.1%, P=.016). Clinical factors associated with a higher death rate were syncope (P=.012), arterial hypotension (P=.021), history of congestive heart failure (P=.013), and chronic pulmonary disease (P=.032). However, only primary thrombolysis was found by multivariate analysis to be an independent predictor of survival (odds ratio for in-hospital death, 0.46; 95% confidence interval, 0.21 to 1.00). Patients who underwent early thrombolytic treatment had a reduced rate of recurrent pulmonary embolism (7.7 versus 18.7%, P<.001) but also a higher frequency of major bleeding episodes (21.9% versus 7.8%, P<.001). Cerebral bleeding occurred in 2 patients in each treatment group, and 1 patient in each group died of a bleeding complication.
Conclusions: The results of our study suggest that thrombolysis may favorably affect the clinical outcome of hemodynamically stable patients with major pulmonary embolism.
Comment in
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Pulmonary embolism thrombolysis: broadening the paradigm for its administration.Circulation. 1997 Aug 5;96(3):716-8. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.96.3.716. Circulation. 1997. PMID: 9264472 No abstract available.
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Association between thrombolytic treatment and the prognosis of hemodynamically stable patients with major pulmonary embolism.Circulation. 1998 Apr 28;97(16):1649-50. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.97.16.1649. Circulation. 1998. PMID: 9593572 No abstract available.
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Treatment of pulmonary embolism with thrombolysis.Circulation. 1998 Aug 25;98(8):825-6. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.98.8.825. Circulation. 1998. PMID: 9727558 No abstract available.
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