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Outcome in Stable Patients With Acute Pulmonary Embolism Who Had Right Ventricular Enlargement and/or Elevated Levels of Troponin I

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Normotensive patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) who have increased troponin levels and right ventricular (RV) dysfunction are thought to be at high risk of death, but the level of risk is unclear. We retrospectively evaluated outcome in 1,273 stable patients with PE who had echocardiographic evaluations of RV size and/or measurement of cardiac troponin I (cTnI). In-hospital all-cause mortality was higher in those with RV enlargement (8.0%, 19 of 237, vs 3.3%, 22 of 663, p = 0.003). With an increased cTnI, irrespective of RV enlargement, all-cause mortality was 8.0% (28 of 330) versus 1.9% (15 of 835) in patients with a normal cTnI (p <0.0001). In patients with an increased cTnI combined with an enlarged right ventricle, all-cause mortality was 10.2% (12 of 118) compared to 1.9% (8 of 421) in patients who had neither (p <0.0001). These data show that increased levels of cTnI and RV enlargement are associated with an adverse outcome in stable patients with acute PE. In conclusion, increased levels of cTnI in combination with RV enlargement might indicate a group who would benefit from intense monitoring and aggressive treatment if subsequently indicated. The outcomes, however, were not extreme enough to warrant routine thrombolytic therapy.

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Methods

This was a retrospective study of patients hospitalized with acute PE who had an evaluation of RV size by echocardiogram or measurement of a cTnI level. Patients were studied from March 2007 through December 2008 at St. Joseph Mercy Oakland Hospital, Pontiac, Michigan, and from January 2004 through June 2008 at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan and William Beaumont Hospital, Troy, Michigan. The investigation was approved by the institutional review boards of each hospital.

Results

Data were obtained in 1,273 patients with acute PE treated with anticoagulants. Age was 65 ± 17 years (mean ± SD) and 578 patients (45%) were men.

Echocardiograms were obtained in 900 patients with acute PE. RV enlargement was identified in 26% (237 of 900). In-hospital mortality from acute PE was higher in those with RV enlargement than in those with a normal right ventricle (4.6%, 11 of 237, vs 0.9%, 6 of 663, p = 0.0003; Table 1). All-cause mortality was also higher in those with RV

Discussion

RV enlargement and increased levels of cTnI were associated with increased in-hospital mortality from PE and increased in-hospital all-cause mortality. Patients with high concentrations of cTnI combined with RV enlargement had the highest mortalities. As others have observed, outcomes were not extreme enough to warrant routine thrombolytic therapy.13

Previous publications have shown that in patients with RV enlargement and any increase of cTnI, all-cause mortalities are 38%4 and 31%7 compared to

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