What are the standardized approaches for patient selection, timing, technique, and anticoagulation regimens for catheter-directed therapy in acute pulmonary embolism?
Patients with acute pulmonary embolism, specifically those with high-risk PE in whom thrombolysis is contraindicated or has failed, or initially stable patients experiencing haemodynamic deterioration despite adequately dosed anticoagulation
Catheter-directed therapy (CDT)
This clinical consensus statement provides a practical, standardized guide for the use of catheter-directed therapy in acute pulmonary embolism, complementing formal guidelines.
There is a growing clinical and scientific interest in catheter-directed therapy (CDT) of acute pulmonary embolism (PE). Currently, CDT should be considered for patients with high-risk PE, in whom thrombolysis is contraindicated or has failed. Also, CDT is a treatment option for initially stable patients in whom anticoagulant treatment fails, i.e., those who experience haemodynamic deterioration despite adequately dosed anticoagulation. However, the definition of treatment failure (primary reperfusion therapy or anticoagulation alone) remains an important area of uncertainty. Moreover, several techniques for CDT are available without evidence supporting one over the other, and variation in practice with regard to periprocedural anticoagulation is considerable. The aim of this position paper is to describe the currently available CDT approaches in PE patients and to standardise patient selection, the timing and technique of the procedure itself as well as anticoagulation regimens during CDT. We discuss several clinical scenarios of the clinical evaluation of the "efficacy" of thrombolysis and anticoagulation, including treatment failure with haemodynamic deterioration and treatment failure based on a lack of improvement. This clinical consensus statement serves as a practical guide for CDT, complementary to the formal guidelines.
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Piotr Pruszczyk
Frederikus Klok Klok
Nils Kucher
EuroIntervention
University of Padua
Leiden University Medical Center
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
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Pruszczyk et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69dabf13aae38ff6ad836525 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4244/eij-d-22-00246