Highlights
•Selected
patients with acute pulmonary embolism can be safely treated at home.
•Eligibility
criteria are firstly pragmatic as those regrouped in the HESTIA rule.
•Severity
criteria as a low PESI score are sometimes used in addition.
•A specific
procedure for outpatient care of PE patients must be provided.
Abstract
Despite clear
potential benefits of outpatient care, most patients suffering from
pulmonary embolism (PE) are currently hospitalized due to the fear of
possible adverse events. Nevertheless, some teams have increased or
envisage to increase outpatient treatment or early discharge.
We performed a
narrative systematic review of studies published on this topic. We
identified three meta-analyses and 23 studies, which involved 3671
patients managed at home (n = 3036) or discharged early
(n = 535). Two main different approaches were applied to select
patients eligible for outpatient in recent prospective studies, one
based on a list of pragmatic criteria as the HESTIA rule, the other
adding severity criteria (i.e. risk of death) as the Pulmonary
Embolism Severity Criteria (PESI) or simplified PESI. In all these
studies, a specific follow-up was performed for patients managed at
home involving a dedicated team. The overall early (i.e. between 1 to
3 months) complication rate was low, less than 2% for thromboembolic
recurrences or major bleedings and less than 3% for deaths with no
evidence in favour of one selection strategy or another.
Outpatient
management appears to be feasible and safe for many patients with PE.
In the coming years,
outpatient treatment may be considered as the first line management
for hemodynamically stable PE patients, subject to the respect of
simple eligibility criteria and on the condition that a specific
procedure for outpatient care is developed in advance.
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