Functional capacity and dyspnea during follow-up after acute pulmonary embolism

Dissecting the determinants of functional capacity during long-term follow-up after acute pulmonary embolism (PE) can help to better characterize a patient population with persisting limitation. In a prospective cohort study, consecutive unselected survivors of acute PE underwent 3- and 12-month fol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of thrombosis and haemostasis 2024-01, Vol.22 (1), p.163-171
Hauptverfasser: Farmakis, Ioannis T., Valerio, Luca, Barco, Stefano, Christodoulou, Konstantinos C., Ewert, Ralf, Giannakoulas, George, Held, Matthias, Hobohm, Lukas, Keller, Karsten, Wilkens, Heinrike, Rosenkranz, Stephan, Konstantinides, Stavros V.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dissecting the determinants of functional capacity during long-term follow-up after acute pulmonary embolism (PE) can help to better characterize a patient population with persisting limitation. In a prospective cohort study, consecutive unselected survivors of acute PE underwent 3- and 12-month follow-up, including six-minute walking distance (6MWD) and dyspnea assessment with the modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) scale. We used reference equations adjusting for age, sex, and anthropometric measurements to define abnormal 6MWD. Overall, 323 of 363 (89.0%) patients had at least one recorded 6MWD value at one year. At 3 months, the prevalence of abnormal 6MWD was 21.9% and at 12 months it was 18.3%. At 3 and 12 months, 58.8% and 52.1% with abnormal 6MWD did not report dyspnea, respectively. On average and during follow-up, 6MWD significantly improved with time, while the mMRC dyspnea scale did not. Abnormal 6MWD was associated with younger age (odds ratio per decade, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.88-0.94), higher body mass index (1.10; 1.03-1.17), smoking (3.53; 1.34-9.31), intermediate- or high-risk PE (3.21; 1.21-8.56), and higher mMRC grading (2.28; 1.59-3.27). Abnormal 6MWD at 3 months was associated with the prospectively defined endpoint of post-PE impairment (3.72; 1.50-9.28) and with poor disease-specific and generic health-related quality of life. Three months after PE, 37% of patients reported dyspnea and 22% had abnormal 6MWD. After a year, 20% still had abnormal 6MWD. Dyspnea correlated with abnormal 6MWD, but over 50% of patients with abnormal 6MWD did not report dyspnea. Abnormal 6MWD predicted subsequent post-pulmonary embolism impairment and worse long-term quality of life. German Clinical Trials Register Identifier DRKS00005939. •Exploring functional capacity helps to characterize patients with persistent limitations after pulmonary embolism (PE).•Prospective cohort study with six-minute walking distance and dyspnea measurements at 3- and 12-months post-PE.•Functional capacity improves during the first year after PE but it remains abnormal in 20%.•Abnormal functional capacity at 3 months is associated with persisting abnormalities.
ISSN:1538-7836
1538-7836
DOI:10.1016/j.jtha.2023.08.024