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- Yiyao Li, Jianian Yang, Peijun Xue, Ting Zhang, Xuefeng Sun, Min Peng, and Juhong Shi.
- Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, State Key Laboratory of Complex Severe and Rare Diseases, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Beijing, China.
- Int J Med Sci. 2024 Jan 1; 21 (8): 139914071399-1407.
AbstractBackground: Hemoptysis is prevalent in acute pulmonary embolism (PE) and significantly influences clinical decision-making. Despite the increasing reports of PE in patients with autoimmune diseases, limited studies have investigated the association between acute PE with hemoptysis and autoimmune disease. Methods: The retrospective study aimed to investigate patients with autoimmune disease who presented with acute PE and hemoptysis at Peking Union Medical College Hospital (PUMCH) between January 2012 and October 2020. A comparative analysis was conducted between patients with and without hemoptysis, as well as between those with autoimmune diseases and those without. Clinical characteristics, PE severity stratification, the amount of hemoptysis, initial anticoagulation management, and prognosis were analyzed descriptively. Results: The study analyzed 896 patients diagnosed with acute PE, of whom 105 (11.7%) presented with hemoptysis. Hemoptysis in PE patients was frequently associated with autoimmune diseases (39%, 41/105), a younger patient population (42.0 vs. 52.7 years old, P =0.002), and a higher prevalence of low-risk PE (53.7 vs. 28.1, P=0.008) compared with non-autoimmune disease patients. Multivariate logistic analysis showed PE patients with primary or metastatic lung cancer, chest pain, age < 48 years old, chronic heart failure, autoimmune disease, pulmonary infection and male were more likely to develop hemoptysis. Patients were grouped based on maximum daily sputum blood volume and PE risk stratification. Most patients (73.2%) received therapeutic-dose anticoagulation. Poor prognosis is observed in patients with moderate to massive hemoptysis and intermediate-high-risk or high-risk PE. Conclusions: Hemoptysis is a relatively common manifestation in patients with PE, and its presence during the diagnostic workup of acute PE necessitates careful analysis of underlying comorbidities. In cases where hemoptysis occurs in individuals with autoimmune diseases in the context of PE, proactive management strategies targeting the primary disease are crucial. Therapeutic decisions should consider both PE severity stratification and the volume of hemoptysis.© The author(s).
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