Thomas Sarah Alice, Wang Grace, Giordano Nicholas, Matthews Tim, Torrey Jasmine, Kabrhel Christopher
Faculty of Medicine, BSc Medical Biosciences Candidate, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Center for Vascular Emergencies, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Intern Emerg Med. 2023 Apr;18(3):879-887. doi: 10.1007/s11739-022-03180-w. Epub 2023 Jan 19.
Pulmonary embolism (PE) is the third-leading cause of cardiovascular death in the United States, and several studies suggest PE shows seasonal variation. Variation in monthly PE diagnosis may be due to pathophysiologic factors or confounding/bias. However, severe PE may be less prone to diagnostic bias. To address this gap, we analyzed two registries from 1/2013-12/2018 with the aim of describing temporal trends in PE diagnosis and severity.
We performed a retrospective analysis of two existing databases containing: (1) consecutive patients diagnosed with PE in the emergency departments (EDs) of two large, urban teaching hospitals, and (2) severe PEs requiring PE Response Team (PERT) activation at one of the above hospitals. The primary outcome was to assess variation in PE diagnosis and severity by calendar month. Separate analysis of these two databases sought to control for workup bias by trainee experience across the academic year. One-way ANOVA and Poisson regression were performed to assess for cyclical variation across calendar months, using Stata v16.1.
The PE diagnosis database contained 1324 patients over 36 months. One-way ANOVA did not reveal a statistically significant (p = 0.713) association between calendar month and PE number. The PERT activation database contained 1082 patients over 72 months. One-way ANOVA revealed a statistically significant (p = 0.024) association between calendar month and activations, repeated year-on-year.
Our results indicate correlation between calendar month and PERT activation; however, this pattern was not observed for PE diagnoses. This finding warrants further investigation into the causes of calendar month variation of PERT activations.
肺栓塞(PE)是美国心血管疾病死亡的第三大原因,多项研究表明PE存在季节性变化。每月PE诊断的差异可能是由于病理生理因素或混杂/偏倚。然而,严重PE可能不太容易出现诊断偏倚。为了填补这一空白,我们分析了2013年1月至2018年12月的两个登记处的数据,目的是描述PE诊断和严重程度的时间趋势。
我们对两个现有数据库进行了回顾性分析,其中包括:(1)在两家大型城市教学医院急诊科连续诊断为PE的患者,以及(2)在上述其中一家医院需要PE反应小组(PERT)启动的严重PE患者。主要结果是评估按日历月划分的PE诊断和严重程度的差异。对这两个数据库的单独分析旨在通过整个学年实习医生的经验来控制检查偏倚。使用Stata v16.1进行单因素方差分析和泊松回归,以评估日历月之间的周期性变化。
PE诊断数据库在36个月内包含1324名患者。单因素方差分析未发现日历月与PE数量之间存在统计学显著关联(p = 0.713)。PERT启动数据库在72个月内包含1082名患者。单因素方差分析显示日历月与启动次数之间存在统计学显著关联(p = 0.024),且逐年重复。
我们的结果表明日历月与PERT启动之间存在相关性;然而,PE诊断未观察到这种模式。这一发现值得进一步调查PERT启动的日历月变化的原因。