Prucnal Christiana K, Kabrhel Christopher, Horick Nora K, Jarman Angela F
Department of Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Department of Emergency Medicine, Center for Vascular Emergencies, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA.
Clin Ther. 2024 Dec;46(12):967-973. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2024.10.018. Epub 2024 Dec 3.
Advanced interventions are increasingly used to treat intermediate- and high-risk acute pulmonary embolism (PE). While sex-based differences exist in treatment of other diseases, it is unknown whether these disparities extend to PE.
This is a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study of adult patients diagnosed with radiographically confirmed intermediate- and high-risk acute PE at a tertiary hospital between 1/1/2012 and 12/31/2021 for whom the PE Response Team was activated. Primary outcome was receipt of any advanced intervention. Descriptive and inferential analyses using Chi-square tests, t tests, and logistic regression were performed to evaluate for factors associated with the primary outcome.
We analyzed 902 patients, of whom 439 (49%) were female. Although women were more likely to present with right heart strain on echo (78.6% vs 71.1% P = 0.012) and elevated NT-proBNP (69.2% vs 55.7% P < 0.001), there was no significant sex-based difference in clinical PE severity, defined as intermediate- versus high-risk, at presentation. Primary outcome did not differ significantly by sex (18.7% vs 23.5% P = 0.129). In multivariate models, high-risk PE decreased odds of receiving an advanced therapy (0.50 [0.31, 0.79] P = 0.003), while receiving assisted ventilation (4.70 [2.90, 7.62], P < 0.001) and full code status (4.18 [1.60, 10.91], P = 0.003) increased odds.
This study adds to the scant literature on sex differences in interventions for acute PE. Significant baseline variation exists between female and male patients presenting with acute PE. Clinical factors were predictive of receiving advanced PE therapies, while sex was not.
高级干预措施越来越多地用于治疗中高危急性肺栓塞(PE)。虽然在其他疾病的治疗中存在基于性别的差异,但尚不清楚这些差异是否也适用于PE。
这是一项对前瞻性队列研究的二次分析,该研究对象为2012年1月1日至2021年12月31日期间在一家三级医院被诊断为经影像学证实的中高危急性PE且PE反应团队被激活的成年患者。主要结局是接受任何高级干预措施。使用卡方检验、t检验和逻辑回归进行描述性和推断性分析,以评估与主要结局相关的因素。
我们分析了902例患者,其中439例(49%)为女性。尽管女性在超声心动图上更易出现右心劳损(78.6%对71.1%,P = 0.012)和NT-proBNP升高(69.2%对55.7%,P < 0.001),但在就诊时,以中高危定义的临床PE严重程度在性别上无显著差异。主要结局在性别上无显著差异(18.7%对23.5%,P = 0.129)。在多变量模型中,高危PE降低了接受高级治疗的几率(0.50 [0.31, 0.79],P = 0.003),而接受辅助通气(4.70 [2.90, 7.62],P < 0.001)和完全复苏状态(4.18 [1.60, 10.91],P = 0.003)则增加了几率。
本研究补充了关于急性PE干预措施中性别差异的稀少文献。急性PE的女性和男性患者之间存在显著的基线差异。临床因素可预测接受高级PE治疗的情况,而性别则不然。