Tuberc Respir Dis.  2003 Jan;54(1):5-14. 10.4046/trd.2003.54.1.5.

The National Survey of Acute Pulmonary Thromboembolism in Korea

Affiliations
  • 1Scientific Committee for National Survey of Acute Pulmonary Thromboembolism, Korean Academy of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases, Korea. khin@kumc.or.kr

Abstract

BACKGROUND: According to the study in ICOPER (International Cooperative Pulmonary Embolism Registry), the overall mortality rate of acute pulmonary thromboembolism (APTE) at 3 months is 17.4%. According to the study for current status of APTE in Japan, the hospital mortality rate is 14%. Although the incidence and mortality rate of APTE has been increasing, patient characteristics, management strategies, and outcome of APTE in the Korean population have not yet been assessed in large series. We therefore performed the national survey for the current status of APTE in the Korean population.
METHODS
808 registry patients with APTE were analyzed with respect to clinical characteristics, risk factors, diagnostic procedures, treatment, and clinical outcome.
RESULTS
Main risk factors were immobilization, recent major surgery, and cancer. Common symptoms were dyspnea and chest pain. Common signs were tachypnea and tachycardia. The majority of registry patients underwent lung perfusion scanning. Spiral CT was used in 309 patients(42.9%), and angiography in 48 patients(7.9%). Heparin was the most widely used treatment. On multivariate logistic regression analysis, onset in hospital (odds ratio 1.88, p=0.0385), lung cancer (odds ratio 9.20, p=0.0050), tachypnea (odds ratio 3.50, p=0.0001), shock (odds ratio 6.74, p=0.0001), and cyanosis (odds ratio 3.45, p=0.0153) were identified as significant prognostic factors. The overall mortality rate was 16.9% and mortality associated with APTE was 9.0%.
CONCLUSIONS
The present registry demonstrated the clinical characteristics, diagnostic strategies, management, and outcome of patient with APTE in Korea. The mortality rate was 9.0%, and the predictors of mortality were onset in hospital, lung cancer, tachypnea, shock, and cyanosis. These results may be important for risk stratification as well as for the identification of potential candidates for more aggressive treatment.

Keyword

Acute pulmonary thromboembolism; National survey

MeSH Terms

Angiography
Chest Pain
Cyanosis
Dyspnea
Heparin
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Immobilization
Incidence
Japan
Korea*
Logistic Models
Lung
Lung Neoplasms
Mortality
Perfusion
Pulmonary Embolism*
Risk Factors
Shock
Tachycardia
Tachypnea
Tomography, Spiral Computed
Heparin
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