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Early Versus Delayed Use of Ultrasound-Assisted Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis in Patients With Acute Submassive Pulmonary Embolism
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Early Versus Delayed Use of Ultrasound-Assisted Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis in Patients With Acute Submassive Pulmonary Embolism

Sushruth Edla, Howard Rosman, Saroj Neupane, Andrew Boshara, Susan Szpunar, Edouard Daher, David Rodriguez, Thomas LaLonde, Hiroshi Yamasaki, Rajendra H Mehta, …
The Journal of invasive cardiology, Vol.30(5), pp.157-162
05/2018
PMID: 29715164

Abstract

Acute Disease Cardiac Catheterization - methods Computed Tomography Angiography Female Fibrinolytic Agents - therapeutic use Follow-Up Studies Humans Male Middle Aged Pulmonary Embolism - diagnosis Pulmonary Embolism - drug therapy Retrospective Studies Thrombolytic Therapy - instrumentation Time-to-Treatment - trends Tissue Plasminogen Activator - therapeutic use Tomography, X-Ray Computed Treatment Outcome Ultrasonography - methods
The effect of early vs delayed use of ultrasound-assisted catheter-directed thrombolysis (USAT) on invasive hemodynamics and in-hospital outcomes in patients with acute submassive pulmonary embolism (PE) is not well known. We evaluated 41 patients with submassive PE to study the association of early USAT (≤24 hours; n = 21) vs delayed USAT (>24 hours; n = 20) with change in invasive hemodynamic measures from pre USAT to post USAT. Significantly greater improvement was observed in the early USAT group compared to the delayed group for median cardiac index (0.6 L/min/m² [IQR, 0.4-1.1 L/min/ m²] vs 0.4 L/min/m² [IQR, 0.1-0.6 L/min/m²]; P=.03), median pulmonary vascular resistance (3.4 Wood units [IQR, 2.5-4.1 Wood units] vs 0.5 Wood units [IQR, 0.2-1.3 Wood units]; P<.001), and mean right ventricular stroke work index (3.5 ± 2.0 g-m/m²/beat vs 2.3 ± 1.6 g-m/m2/beat; P=.04). Although not statistically significant, a trend in favor of early treatment was found for improvement in mean right ventricle to left ventricle diameter ratio (0.38 ± 0.17 vs 0.33 ± 0.21; P=.40), mean pulmonary artery pressure (8.4 ± 7.1 mm Hg vs 5.3 ± 5.2 mm Hg; P=.13), and median pulmonary artery pulsatility index (1.14 [IQR, 2.01-0.45] vs 0.65 [IQR, 0.22-1.78]; P=.49). The mean postprocedural length of stay was significantly lower in the early-USAT group (6.0 ± 2.7 days vs 10.1 ± 7.0 days; P=.02). Three patients experienced moderate bleeding (2 patients in the early-USAT group and 1 patient in the delayed-USAT group) and no major bleeds or in-hospital mortality occurred. Early USAT was associated with greater improvement in pulmonary hemodynamics and shorter postprocedural length of stay compared with delayed USAT in patients with acute submassive PE.

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