Comparison of easy-to-use clinical prognostic models to identify low-risk normotensive patients with pulmonary embolism.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
41422946
Description
Background
Lack of practicality is a common barrier to the use of clinical prognostic models for acute pulmonary embolism (PE).Objectives
To compare easy-to-use prognostic models with <10 readily available variables to identify PE low-risk patients who are candidates for home care.Methods
Based on prospective cohort data from 677 patients with acute PE from 9 Swiss hospitals, we calculated 11 easy-to-use prognostic models (sPESI, Geneva Prognostic Score, shock index [SI], BOVA, modified FAST, eStiMaTe, PATHOS, Uresandi, Agterof, Huang, ESC-2019) and classified patients as low vs. higher risk. The primary outcome was 30-day overall mortality. For each model, we examined test characteristics and the weighted clinical net benefit, i.e., the percentage of avoided hospitalizations in low-risk patients minus the percentage of deceased low-risk patients, assuming that death is 100 times worse than a not avoided hospitalization.Results
Overall, 21/677 patients (3.1%) died within 30 days. The proportion of patients classified as low risk varied widely from 18.9% (eStiMaTe) to 95.8% (SI). Mortality among low-risk patients ranged from 0% (sPESI, eStiMaTe, ESC-2019) to 3.0% (modified FAST), with sensitivities varying from 100% (sPESI, eStiMaTe, ESC-2019) to 9.5% (SI). Similarly, the negative likelihood ratios for mortality ranged from 0.06 (sPESI) to 0.95 (modified FAST). The weighted net benefit was highest for the sPESI (35.9%) and lowest for the SI (-187.6%).Conclusion
The sPESI, the eStimMaTe score, and the ESC-2019 model most accurately identified patients with PE who are at low risk of mortality. The sPESI showed the highest clinical net benefit.
Lack of practicality is a common barrier to the use of clinical prognostic models for acute pulmonary embolism (PE).Objectives
To compare easy-to-use prognostic models with <10 readily available variables to identify PE low-risk patients who are candidates for home care.Methods
Based on prospective cohort data from 677 patients with acute PE from 9 Swiss hospitals, we calculated 11 easy-to-use prognostic models (sPESI, Geneva Prognostic Score, shock index [SI], BOVA, modified FAST, eStiMaTe, PATHOS, Uresandi, Agterof, Huang, ESC-2019) and classified patients as low vs. higher risk. The primary outcome was 30-day overall mortality. For each model, we examined test characteristics and the weighted clinical net benefit, i.e., the percentage of avoided hospitalizations in low-risk patients minus the percentage of deceased low-risk patients, assuming that death is 100 times worse than a not avoided hospitalization.Results
Overall, 21/677 patients (3.1%) died within 30 days. The proportion of patients classified as low risk varied widely from 18.9% (eStiMaTe) to 95.8% (SI). Mortality among low-risk patients ranged from 0% (sPESI, eStiMaTe, ESC-2019) to 3.0% (modified FAST), with sensitivities varying from 100% (sPESI, eStiMaTe, ESC-2019) to 9.5% (SI). Similarly, the negative likelihood ratios for mortality ranged from 0.06 (sPESI) to 0.95 (modified FAST). The weighted net benefit was highest for the sPESI (35.9%) and lowest for the SI (-187.6%).Conclusion
The sPESI, the eStimMaTe score, and the ESC-2019 model most accurately identified patients with PE who are at low risk of mortality. The sPESI showed the highest clinical net benefit.
Date of Publication
2026-03
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
Home Care
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Mortality
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Pulmonary Embolism
•
Risk Scores
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Méan, Marie | |
Righini, Marc |
Series
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
1538-7836
1538-7933
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Access(Rights)
embargo