Risk Stratification of Acute Pulmonary Embolism

AbstractPurpose of reviewAcute pulmonary embolism (PE) is a heterogeneous disease process whose presentation varies widely between individuals who are asymptomatic, develop cardiogenic shock, or experience acute PE-related mortality. The purpose of this review is to summarize the available tools used to risk stratify patients presenting with acute PE. We will particularly focus on the demographic, clinical, laboratory, imaging, and multifactor tools used to predict mortality, PE-related morbidity, and bleeding complications.Recent findingsEstablished risk assessment strategies incorporate clinical and demographic information into risk scores such as PESI, sPESI, HESTIA, or BOVA scores to stratify patients using their individual risk profiles. Elevated biomarkers (troponin, BNP/NT-Pro-BNP, lactate), evidence of RV dilation and dysfunction, decreased cardiac reserve, and residual lower extremity and intracardiac clot burden are associated with worse prognosis. Novel techniques to identify cardiac reserve are helpful to identify patients who are at high risk for early decompensation.SummaryEarly standardized risk stratification plays a crucial role in management of patients with acute PE. Identification of low-risk population allows for early discharge and outpatient management, while identification of high-risk population allows for rapid escalation of care and allocation of highly specialized resources in a timely fashion. Finally, pulmonary embolism response team model of car...
Source: Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine - Category: Cardiology Source Type: research