The Functional Characterization of Venous Thromboembolic Disease (FUVID) study: rationale, design, and methods of a prospective, observational, multicenter study to evaluate mechanisms of exercise intolerance and dyspnea following pediatric pulmonary embolism.

Journal: Research And Practice In Thrombosis And Haemostasis
Published:
Abstract

To date, the focus of investigation in pediatric pulmonary embolism (PE) has been on PE recurrence and anticoagulant-related bleeding. While highly relevant, these outcomes do not fully capture functional limitations and the psychological impact that comprises post-PE syndrome. The primary objective of the Functional Characterization of Venous Thromboembolic Disease (FUVID) study was to investigate mechanisms of post-PE syndrome in children. The ongoing FUVID study will prospectively enroll and systematically follow, over 12 months and with standardized pulmonary, cardiac, and muscle testing, a multicenter prospective cohort of 80 pediatric patients with first-episode PE without comorbidities. FUVID has 2 coprimary outcomes: exercise intolerance and exertional dyspnea. Exercise intolerance will be defined objectively as a percent predicted peak oxygen uptake based on ideal body weight or milliliters per minute per kilogram of lean body mass during cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Dyspnea will be objectively quantified using Borg questionnaires and defined as a mean difference of >1 at the end of the warm-up and submaximal work rates during exercise testing, simulating conditions during daily life that induce dyspnea. Pertinent secondary outcomes include anxiety, depression, and quality of life. The FUVID study will investigate the relationship between symptoms (exercise intolerance and exertional dyspnea) and multiple mechanisms-hemodynamic, ventilatory, or peripheral/muscle-within the same patient at rest, submaximal exercise (simulating activities of daily living), and maximal exercise using objective measures. It will provide new evidence for selecting patients for long-term follow-up, including psychological sequelae, after PE, the modalities this follow-up should include, and the findings interpreted as indicating functional limitations after PE.

Authors
Ayesha Zia, Michael Nelson, Jimin Ren, Song Zhang, Robert Mattrey, Brian Han, Tarique Hussain, Joshua Greer, Manal Al Qahtani, Kendra Malone, Sonja Stutzman, Deseray Sida, Sharon Primeaux, Marcela Torres, Clay Cohen, Shelley Crary, Jonathan Bernstein, Hilary Whitworth, Riten Kumar, Kisha Beg, Osman Khan, Madhvi Rajpurkar, Kerry Hege, Beverly Schaefer, Gary Woods, Lauren Amos, Marisol Betensky, Rukhmi Bhat, Sarah O' Brien, Julie Jaffray, Rohit Jesudas, Martha Pacheco, Cristina Tarango, Angela Weyand, Hope Wilson, Jessica Garcia, Mary Dang, Ruchika Sharma, Neil Goldenberg, Frederikus Klok, Christoph Male, Benjamin Levine, Bryce Balmain, Tony Babb