Abstract

IntroductionMultidisciplinary Pulmonary Embolism Response Teams (PERTs) streamline care of adults with life-threatening pulmonary embolism (PE). Given rarity of pediatric PE, developing a clinical, educational, and research PERT paradigm is a novel and underutilized concept in pediatrics. Research QuestionIs PERT feasible in pediatrics, and does it improve PE care? Study Design and MethodsA strategy-to-execution proposal to launch a pediatric PERT was developed for institutional buy-in. Key stakeholders collectively implemented PERT. Data were collected for the two-year pre- and post-PERT eras, and outcomes were compared. ResultsPERT implementation took 12 months. Our PERT, led by hematology, comprises of pediatric experts in emergency medicine, critical care, interventional cardiology, anesthesiology, and interventional radiology. Data on 30 patients pre-PERT and 31 post-PERT were analyzed. Pre-PERT, 10%(3/30), 13%(4/30), 20%(6/30), and 57%(17/30), and post-PERT, 3%(1/31), 10%(3/31), 16%(5/31), and 71%(22/31) were categorized as high-risk, intermediate-LOW risk, intermediate-HIGH risk, and low-risk PE, respectively. Post-PERT, there were 13 unique PERT activations. PERT was activated on all eligible PE patients and, additionally, on four low-risk PEs. Time-to-echocardiogram was shorter post-PERT (4.7 hrs vs 2 hrs, P=0.0147). Anticoagulation was ordered (90 min vs 54 min, P=0.003) and given sooner (154 min vs 113 min, P=0.049) post-PERT. There were no differences in time-to-reperfusion therapies (12 hrs pre-PERT vs 8.7 hrs post-PERT, P=0.1). Five (83.3%) of six eligible (intermediate-HIGH and high-risk) patients received reperfusion therapies in the post-PERT era compared to three (37.5%) of eight eligible patients in the pre-PERT era (P=0.0001). There were no differences in major bleeding, mortality, or length of stay in either era. InterpretationThe pediatric PERT paradigm was successfully created and adopted locally. Our PERT enhanced access to experts, facilitated timely advanced therapies, and held value for low-risk PE. The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (UTSW) and Children’s Health System of Texas pediatric PERT may serve as a best-practice model for streamlining care for pediatric PE.

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