2016
DOI: 10.1183/13993003.00282-2016
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Clinical features and short-term outcomes of cancer patients with suspected and unsuspected pulmonary embolism: the EPIPHANY study

Abstract: The study aimed to identify predictors of overall 30-day mortality in cancer patients with pulmonary embolism including suspected pulmonary embolism (SPE) and unsuspected pulmonary embolism (UPE) events. Secondary outcomes included 30- and 90-day major bleeding and venous thromboembolism (VTE) recurrence.The study cohort included 1033 consecutive patients with pulmonary embolism from the multicentre observational ambispective EPIPHANY study (March 2006-October 2014). A subgroup of 497 patients prospectively as… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(67 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(45 reference statements)
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“…Analysis of data from the observational EPIPHANY study shows that patients with unsuspected PE who are truly asymptomatic (not hospitalized at the time of diagnosis and with no PE‐related symptoms and normal vital signs) have a significantly lower 30‐day mortality (3%) than both patients with unsuspected PE who were subsequently found to have symptoms of PE on clinical evaluation (20%) and patients with suspected PE (i.e. CT‐imaging performed to confirm PE diagnosis; 21%) []. These findings are supported by data from two single‐center studies (one prospective and one retrospective) showing good outcomes in patients with incidental PE treated at home (Table ).…”
Section: Evidence Gapsmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…Analysis of data from the observational EPIPHANY study shows that patients with unsuspected PE who are truly asymptomatic (not hospitalized at the time of diagnosis and with no PE‐related symptoms and normal vital signs) have a significantly lower 30‐day mortality (3%) than both patients with unsuspected PE who were subsequently found to have symptoms of PE on clinical evaluation (20%) and patients with suspected PE (i.e. CT‐imaging performed to confirm PE diagnosis; 21%) []. These findings are supported by data from two single‐center studies (one prospective and one retrospective) showing good outcomes in patients with incidental PE treated at home (Table ).…”
Section: Evidence Gapsmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…With the widespread utilization of CT imaging to monitor cancer progression, ~50% of patients with cancer diagnosed with PE in specialist oncology centers have “incidental” or “unsuspected” PE (i.e. imaging performed for reasons other than PE suspicion) . Analysis of data from the observational EPIPHANY study shows that patients with unsuspected PE who are truly asymptomatic (not hospitalized at the time of diagnosis and with no PE‐related symptoms and normal vital signs) have a significantly lower 30‐day mortality (3%) than both patients with unsuspected PE who were subsequently found to have symptoms of PE on clinical evaluation (20%) and patients with suspected PE (i.e.…”
Section: Evidence Gapsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In conclusion, this large cohort study by FONT et al [6] sheds new light on the contemporary clinical course of suspected and unsuspected cancer-associated PE. Within the limitations of an observational study, the authors presented a novel cancer-associated PE risk classification that discriminates between a patient group with UPE without symptom burden (TA-UPE) who experienced a 30-day risk of death of only 3%, and all other patients who experienced 30-day risk of death of around 20%.…”
mentioning
confidence: 62%
“…These tools are based on short-term mortality, with a higher predicted risk of short-term mortality indicating that an inpatient management is preferred. FONT et al [6] have addressed this short-term mortality specifically in the population of cancer patients with PE. Importantly, they defined a novel classification, which shows that patients with a so-called TA-UPE had only a much smaller risk of 30-day mortality of 3%, whereas all other patients (either presenting with SPE or UPE with symptoms/signs suggestive of PE (UPE-S)) had a 30-day risk of death of around 20%.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the EPIPHANY study, patients with cancer and PE were divided into three groups, those with clinically suspected PE, those with clinically unsuspected PE and no symptoms attributable to PE, and a third group with clinically unsuspected PE who retrospectively had symptoms related to PE. Patients with clinically suspected PE were more likely to have a syncope or a heart rate >100 beats per min than symptomatic patients with clinically unsuspected PE, but 90-day mortality rates were comparable in these two groups and higher than in the group of asymptomatic patients [6].…”
Section: Are Clinically Unsuspected Vte Events Less Severe Than Clinimentioning
confidence: 79%