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Browsing by Author "Rosovsky, Rachel P."
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Item A clinical decision framework to guide the outpatient treatment of emergency department patients diagnosed with acute pulmonary embolism or deep vein thrombosis: Results from a multidisciplinary consensus panel(Wiley, 2021-12-15) Kabrhel, Christopher; Vinson, David R.; Mitchell, Alice Marina; Rosovsky, Rachel P.; Chang, Anna Marie; Hernandez-Nino, Jackeline; Wolf, Stephen J.; Emergency Medicine, School of MedicineThe outpatient treatment of select emergency department patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) or deep vein thrombosis (DVT) has been shown to be safe, cost effective and associated with high patient satisfaction. Despite this, outpatient PE and DVT treatment remains uncommon. To address this, the American College of Emergency Physicians assembled a multidisciplinary team of content experts to provide evidence-based recommendations and practical advice to help clinicians safely treat patients with low-risk PE and DVT without hospitalization. The emergency clinician must stratify the patient's risk of clinical decompensation due to their PE or DVT as well as their risk of bleeding due to anticoagulation. The clinician must also select and start an anticoagulant and ensure that the patient has access to the medication in a timely manner. Reliable follow-up is critical, and the patient must also be educated about signs or symptoms that should prompt a return to the emergency department. To facilitate access to these recommendations, the consensus panel also created 2 web-based "point-of-care tools."Item Thrombosis, Bleeding, and the Observational Effect of Early Therapeutic Anticoagulation on Survival in Critically Ill Patients With COVID-19(ACP, 2021) Al-Samkari, Hanny; Gupta, Shruti; Leaf, Rebecca Karp; Wang, Wei; Rosovsky, Rachel P.; Brenner, Samantha K.; Hayek, Salim S.; Berlin, Hanna; Kapoor, Rajat; Shaefi, Shahzad; Melamed, Michal L.; Sutherland, Anne; Radbel, Jared; Green, Adam; Garibaldi, Brian T.; Srivastava, Anand; Leonberg-Yoo, Amanda; Shehata, Alexandre M.; Flythe, Jennifer E.; Rashidi, Arash; Goyal, Nitender; Chan, Lili; Mathews, Kusum S.; Hedayati, S. Susan; Dy, Rajany; Toth-Manikowski, Stephanie M.; Zhang, Jingjing; Mallappallil, Mary; Redfern, Roberta E.; Bansal, Amar D.; Short, Samuel A.P.; Vangel, Mark G.; Admon, Andrew J.; Semler, Matthew W.; Bauer, Kenneth A.; Hernán, Miguel A.; Leaf, David E.; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground: Hypercoagulability may be a key mechanism of death in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Objective: To evaluate the incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) and major bleeding in critically ill patients with COVID-19 and examine the observational effect of early therapeutic anticoagulation on survival. Design: In a multicenter cohort study of 3239 critically ill adults with COVID-19, the incidence of VTE and major bleeding within 14 days after intensive care unit (ICU) admission was evaluated. A target trial emulation in which patients were categorized according to receipt or no receipt of therapeutic anticoagulation in the first 2 days of ICU admission was done to examine the observational effect of early therapeutic anticoagulation on survival. A Cox model with inverse probability weighting to adjust for confounding was used. Setting: 67 hospitals in the United States. Participants: Adults with COVID-19 admitted to a participating ICU. Measurements: Time to death, censored at hospital discharge, or date of last follow-up. Results: Among the 3239 patients included, the median age was 61 years (interquartile range, 53 to 71 years), and 2088 (64.5%) were men. A total of 204 patients (6.3%) developed VTE, and 90 patients (2.8%) developed a major bleeding event. Independent predictors of VTE were male sex and higher D-dimer level on ICU admission. Among the 2809 patients included in the target trial emulation, 384 (11.9%) received early therapeutic anticoagulation. In the primary analysis, during a median follow-up of 27 days, patients who received early therapeutic anticoagulation had a similar risk for death as those who did not (hazard ratio, 1.12 [95% CI, 0.92 to 1.35]). Limitation: Observational design. Conclusion: Among critically ill adults with COVID-19, early therapeutic anticoagulation did not affect survival in the target trial emulation.