Outcome of patients with different clinical presentations of high-risk pulmonary embolism
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
The 2019 European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines provide a revised definition of high-risk pulmonary embolism (PE) encompassing three clinical presentations: Cardiac arrest, obstructive shock, and persistent hypotension. This study investigated the prognostic implications of this new definition.
Data from 784 consecutive PE patients prospectively enrolled in a single-centre registry were analysed. Study outcomes include an in-hospital adverse outcome (PE-related death or cardiopulmonary resuscitation) and in-hospital all-cause mortality. Overall, 86 patients (11.0%) presented with high-risk PE and more often had an adverse outcome (43.0%) compared to intermediate-high-risk patients (6.1%;
The revised ESC 2019 guidelines definition of high-risk PE stratifies subgroups at different risk of in-hospital adverse outcomes and all-cause mortality. Risk prediction can be improved by using an optimised venous lactate cut-off value to diagnose obstructive shock, which might help to better assess the risk-to-benefit ratio of systemic thrombolysis in different subgroups of high-risk patients.
Contributors

Matthias Ebner
Author

Carmen Sentler
Author

Veli-Pekka Harjola
Author

Héctor Bueno
Author

Markus H Lerchbaumer
Author

Gerd Hasenfuß
Author

Kai-Uwe Eckardt
Author

Stavros V Konstantinides
Author

Mareike Lankeit
Author

