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Venous thromboembolic disease is a clinical entity including pulmonary embolism (PE) and deep vein thrombosis (DVT). It is a chronic disease with 30% recurrence rate at 10 years. In patients with recurrent PE clinical suspicion, an objective and accurate diagnostic method/strategy is warranted to exclude or confirm a PE new episode diagnosis and to decide on treatment initiation.
Recurrent PE diagnosis raises several issues related to the limitations of clinical scores, D-dimer testing, and diagnostic imaging used for a first episode diagnosis. Most importantly, residual obstruction on chest imaging reported in more than 50% of cases at 6 months can make it difficult to distinguish between an old and a new thrombosis in the absence of possible comparison with a previous imaging carried out under the same modalities.
There are currently few recommendations about the diagnostic strategy for patients with a recurrent PE clinical suspicion and these recommendations are not very consistent due to the lack of a validated strategy. None of current guidelines have included imaging-detectable lower-limb DVT within the strategies despite a reported high prevalence of PE-associated DVT. In one study using venography, 82% (95% CI 76.5 - 86.9) of angiographically-proven PE patients had an associated proximal or distal deep vein thrombosis, of which 42% were asymptomatic. In another study using lower-limb venous ultrasound, a proximal or distal DVT was detected in 93% (95% CI 85-97) of patients with PE.
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In this study, patients with PE clinical suspicion and a previous PE episode have a standard diagnostic work-up based on clinical probability assessment, D-dimer testing and diagnostic imaging (pulmonary CT angiography, ventilation perfusion scan).
A bilateral lower-limb venous colour doppler ultrasound (CDUS) is performed in parallel in these patients as usually carried out in our hospital for the diagnosis management of patients with clinically suspected PE. This test is performed and interpreted by an independent sonographer unaware of the results of the standard diagnostic work-up.
Lower-limb venous CDUS is then compared to the results of the standard work-up as interpreted during expert panel meetings by members involved in the diagnosis and management of patients with PE and DVT.
Data will be collected both retrospectively and prospectively.
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115 participants in 1 patient group
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Sophie LAFOND, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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