Background: We investigated the prognostic role of right ventricular enlargement on multidetector-row chest CT in acute pulmonary embolism (PE).
Methods and results: We studied 63 patients with CT-confirmed PE who underwent echocardiography within the ensuing 24 hours. Adverse clinical events, defined as 30-day mortality or the need for cardiopulmonary resuscitation, mechanical ventilation, pressors, rescue thrombolysis, or surgical embolectomy, were present in 24 patients. We performed off-line CT measurements of right and left ventricular dimensions (RV(D), LV(D)) with axial and 2-dimensional reconstructed 4-chamber (4-CH) views. The proportion of patients with RV(D)/LV(D)>0.9 on the axial view was similar in patients with (70.8%) and those without adverse events (71.8%; P=0.577). In contrast, RV(D)/LV(D)>0.9 on the 4-CH view was more common in patients with (80.3%) than without (51.3%; P=0.015) adverse events. The area under the curve of RV(D)/LV(D) from the axial and 4-CH views for predicting adverse events was 0.667 and 0.753, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity of RV(D)/LV(D)>0.9 for predicting adverse events were 37.5% and 92.3% on the axial view and 83.3% and 48.7% on the reconstructed 4-CH view, respectively. RV(D)/LV(D)>0.9 on the 4-CH view was an independent predictor for adverse events (OR, 4.02; 95% CI, 1.06 to 15.19; P=0.041) when adjusted for age, obesity, cancer, and recent surgery.
Conclusions: Right ventricular enlargement on the reconstructed CT 4-CH views predicts adverse clinical events in patients with acute PE. Ventricular CT measurements obtained from 4-CH views are superior to those from axial views for identifying high-risk patients.