severity of pulmonary embolism (PE)
Last reviewed 01/2021
The task force for the diagnosis and management of acute pulmonary embolism of the European Society of Cardiology suggest that the severity of PE should be understood according to the PE-related early mortality risk rather than the anatomical burden and the shape and distribution of intrapulmonary emboli (1).
Hence the task force suggests that the currently used terms such as 'massive', 'submassive' and 'non-massive' be replaced with the estimated level of the risk of PE-related early death (during the acute phase in the hospital or within 30 days ) (1).
Initially the patients can be divided according to the haemodynamic stability to:
- high-risk PE
- the patient is unstable haemodynamically and may present with
- shock or
- persistent hypotension - systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg or a drop of >40 mmHg for more than 15 minutes that was not triggered by new onset arrhythmia, hypovolemia or sepsis
- is a life threatening condition
- requires specific diagnostic and therapaeutic strategies
- short term mortality is >15%
- the patient is unstable haemodynamically and may present with
- non-high-risk PE
- the patient is haemodynamically stable
- can be further divided according to presence of markers of RV dysfunction
and/or myocardial injury into
- intermediate risk PE - at least one RV dysfunction or one myocardial injury marker is positive
- low risk PE - all checked RV dysfunction and myocardial injury markers are found negative, short term PE related mortality is <1% (1)
Note:
- principal markers used in risk stratification of non-high-risk PE are:
- right ventricular dysfunction
- RV dilatation, hypokinesis or pressure overload on echocardiography
- RV dilatation on spiral computed tomography
- BNP or NT-proBNP elevation
- Elevated right heart pressure at RHC
- myocardial injury
- cardiac troponin T or I positive
- human fatty acid binding protein (H-FABP) elevation
- right ventricular dysfunction
Reference: