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The Investigator postulate that the use of PESI in addition to routine clinical practice, as opposed to routine clinical practice based on clinical judgment alone, will help physicians to correctly identify PE patients at low-risk of adverse outcomes. Considered that low-risk patients could benefit from a short hospital stay, aim of this study is to demonstrate that the use of PESI will lead physicians to discharge these patients earlier, thus reducing the duration of hospital stay of PE patients (primary outcome).
Outpatients diagnosed with PE at the emergency department (ED) and admitted to participating units represent the target population
As the availability of DOACs may influence the duration of hospital stay, the secondary objectives of the present study are:
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STUDY DESIGN
Within 24 hours from acute PE diagnosis, each treating physician (local Investigator) will be centrally randomized. Treating physicians (local Investigator) of the participating Units will call the coordinating centres by phone for randomization. Before randomization, in order to avoid any influence on treatment choice, each treating physician (local Investigator) should declare in advance which treatment strategy will use for his patient (intention-to-treat), i.e. standard treatment with heparin plus vitamin K antagonist (standard group) or DOACs (DOACs group) Randomization will be stratified by treatment choice of the local Investigator. Each of two 'intention-to-treat' approaches will be therefore randomized to two arms, i.e. arm 1 or arm 2.
Arm 1: treating physicians must formally calculate PESI and report in the clinical record form* each day of hospitalization on top of routine clinical practice (standard care)
Arm 2: standard care (i.e. no formally calculation of PESI on top)
Randomization will be performed centrally with a 1:1 ratio, following a computer-generated list of randomization.
STUDY POPULATION
1.1 Population
Randomised physicians:
Each Local Investigator of participating canters. All participating centres are Internal Medicine Unit.
PE population:
Consecutive adult outpatients of any age, gender and race, with an objectively confirmed diagnosis of a suspected or unsuspected acute PE at the emergency department (ED) and admitted to participating units will be included.
Suspected PE means that diagnosis has been made by an imaging test (computed tomographic pulmonary angiography [CTPA], pulmonary angiography, V/Q lung scan) prescribed by a treating physician who had clinical suspicion of PE.
Unsuspected PE means that diagnosis has been made incidentally by an imaging test performed for other clinical indications (e.g. cancer staging or follow-up).
Objective diagnosis of acute PE means: a positive computed tomographic pulmonary angiography (CTPA), a positive pulmonary angiography, a high-probability V/Q lung scan (or perfusion lung scan with negative chest X-ray), or intermediate probability V/Q or perfusion lung scan with proximal deep-vein thrombosis (DVT) documented by compression ultrasonography.
1.2 Sample size calculation
The Investigators hypothesize that the distribution of hospital stay duration for PE will have a standard deviation of 4 days. The I vestigators also hypothesize that the mean duration of hospital stay will be reduced by at least 15% in PE patients whose treating physician will be randomised to formally use PESI and by 5% in PE patients whose treating physician will not be randomised to formally calculate PESI. Low-risk PE patients are almost 50% of all PE population. Therefore, with an α error of 0.05 and a statistical power (1-β error) of 80%, 200 patients for each group (a total of 400 patients) need to be enrolled to find a statistically significant difference (p<0.05) between the mean hospital stay length. As the variable 'hospital stay length' will have a non-normal distribution and needs to be expressed and reported as median, 10% extra patients need to be enrolled to reach a statistically significant difference with the previous statistical assumptions.
Final total sample size will be, therefore, of 440 patients (220 patients for each group)
OUTCOMES
Main study parameter/endpoint
The primary outcome is the median length of hospital stay
Secondary study parameters/endpoints
The secondary efficacy outcomes will be the following:
health-system measures
patient-related outcomes
The safety outcomes will be the following:
overall mortality
PE-related
Hospitalization-related
Overall mortality, PE-related safety outcomes, post-discharge hospital re-admission and outpatient visits to emergency department will be measured at 14 days, 30 days, and 90 days.
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125 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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