Quality of life 1 month after acute pulmonary embolism in emergency department patients

Author:

Weekes Anthony J.1ORCID,Davison Jillian2,Lupez Kathryn13,Raper Jaron D.14,Thomas Alyssa M.15,Cox Carly A.16,Esener Dasia7,Boyd Jeremy S.8,Nomura Jason T.9,Murphy Kathleen9,Ockerse Patrick M.10,Leech Stephen2,Johnson Jakea8,Abrams Eric7,Kelly Christopher10,O'Connell Nathaniel S.11

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine Atrium Health's Carolinas Medical Center Charlotte North Carolina USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine Orlando Health Orlando Florida USA

3. Department of Emergency Medicine Tufts Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA

5. Emergency Department Houston Methodist Baytown Hospital Houston Texas USA

6. Emergency Medicine of Idaho Meridian Idaho USA

7. Department of Emergency Medicine Kaiser Permanente San Diego California USA

8. Department of Emergency Medicine Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee USA

9. Department of Emergency Medicine Christiana Care Newark Delaware USA

10. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Utah Health Salt Lake City Utah USA

11. Department of Biostatistics and Data Science Wake Forest University School of Medicine Winston‐Salem North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe Pulmonary Embolism Quality‐of‐Life (PEmb‐QoL) questionnaire assesses quality of life (QoL) after pulmonary embolism (PE). We aimed to determine whether any clinical or pathophysiologic features of PE were associated with worse PEmb‐QoL scores 1 month after PE.MethodsIn this prospective multicenter registry, we conducted PEmb‐QoL questionnaires. We determined differences in QoL domain scores for four primary variables: clinical deterioration (death, cardiac arrest, respiratory failure, hypotension requiring fluid bolus, catecholamine support, or new dysrhythmia), right ventricular dysfunction (RVD), PE risk stratification, and subsequent rehospitalization. For overall QoL score, we fit a multivariable regression model that included these four primary variables as independent variables.ResultsOf 788 PE patients participating in QoL assessments, 156 (19.8%) had a clinical deterioration event, 236 (30.7%) had RVD of which 38 (16.1%) had escalated interventions. For those without and with clinical deterioration, social limitations had mean (±SD) scores of 2.07 (±1.27) and 2.36 (±1.47), respectively (p = 0.027). For intensity of complaints, mean (±SD) scores for patients without RVD (4.32 ± 2.69) were significantly higher than for those with RVD with or without reperfusion interventions (3.82 ± 1.81 and 3.83 ± 2.11, respectively; p = 0.043). There were no domain score differences between PE risk stratification groups. All domain scores were worse for patients with rehospitalization versus without. By multivariable analysis, worse total PEmb‐QoL scores with effect sizes were subsequent rehospitalization 11.29 (6.68–15.89), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) 8.17 (3.91–12.43), and longer index hospital length of stay 0.06 (0.03–0.08).ConclusionsAcute clinical deterioration, RVD, and PE severity were not predictors of QoL at 1 month post‐PE. Independent predictors of worsened QoL were rehospitalization, COPD, and index hospital length of stay.

Funder

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine,General Medicine

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