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European Respiratory Society, European Respiratory Journal, 3(42), p. 681-688

DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00097512

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Echocardiography and pulmonary embolism severity index have independent prognostic roles in pulmonary embolism

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

We analysed a cohort of patients with normotensive pulmonary embolism (PE) in order to assess whether combining echocardiography and biomarkers with the pulmonary embolism severity index (PESI) improves the risk stratification in comparison to the PESI alone. The PESI was calculated in normotensive patients with PE who also underwent echocardiography and assays of cardiac troponin I and brain natriuretic peptide. 30-day adverse outcome was defined as death, recurrent PE or shock. 529 patients were included, 25 (4.7%, 95% CI 3.2-6.9%) had at least one outcome event. The proportion of patients with adverse events increased from 2.1% in PESI class I-II to 8.4% in PESI class III-IV, and to 14.3% in PESI class V (p