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Rescue catheter-based therapies for the treatment of acute massive pulmonary embolism after unsuccessful systemic thrombolysis

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The management of acute massive pulmonary embolism (PE) patients who did not respond to systemic thrombolysis (ST) has not been well established. The present study aimed to investigate the safety… Click to show full abstract

The management of acute massive pulmonary embolism (PE) patients who did not respond to systemic thrombolysis (ST) has not been well established. The present study aimed to investigate the safety and effectiveness of catheter-based therapies (CDT) in this condition. We conducted a retrospective study of PE patients after unsuccessful ST (UST) between January 2012 and January 2018. Massive PE was identified in 408 patients and treated with full-dose ST therapy. Thrombolysis at 36 h was judged to be unsuccessful in 52 patients. Four ineligible patients were excluded, and the remaining 48 patients underwent rescue CDT: 30 patients underwent thrombus fragmentation with a rotating pigtail catheter; 8 patients underwent Straub rotational thrombectomy; and 10 patients underwent AngioJet rheolytic thrombectomy. In total, 42 patients subsequently underwent CDT relative to reduced-dose thrombolysis. Pooled clinical success was achieved in 45 patients, and the time-to-clinical instability relief for CDT was short (i.e., 48 h). Clinical findings significantly improved with oxygen saturation and the shock index ( p  < 0.01). CDT resulted in a significant decrease in the right ventricular (RV)/left ventricular end-diastolic diameter ratio and the average number of patients with pulmonary hypertension ( p  < 0.01). None of the patients suffered major complications or procedure-related adverse events, and two patients experienced minor complications. During follow-up, RV function symptoms were uneventful. The present study found that CDT is a safe and effective modality for rescue management of massive PE in patients with clinical instability and RV dysfunction after UST, leading to improved clinical outcomes and RV function with a low complication rate.

Keywords: catheter; pulmonary embolism; systemic thrombolysis; thrombolysis; massive pulmonary; acute massive

Journal Title: Journal of Thrombosis and Thrombolysis
Year Published: 2020

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