This study (HOME-PE2) is a multicenter, randomized controlled trial comparing home treatment versus hospitalization in patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) who have no clinical severity criteria according to the Hestia rule but present either right ventricular dysfunction or elevated cardiac troponin levels. While outpatient management is considered safe for low-risk PE patients, the optimal management of patients without clinical severity but with signs of right ventricular strain or myocardial injury remains uncertain, and current guidelines are inconsistent. As a result, most of these patients are still hospitalized despite limited evidence supporting this approach. The primary objective is to assess whether home treatment is non-inferior to hospitalization in terms of safety, defined by the 7-day rate of adverse events according to the EARTH consensus. Secondary objectives include evaluation of net clinical benefit, quality of life, functional status, and healthcare resource utilization, as well as exploration of sex-related differences and cost-effectiveness. A total of 568 adult patients with confirmed PE will be randomized (1:1) to either home treatment with early discharge or standard hospitalization. Patients will be followed for 90 days.
PE is a common and potentially life-threatening condition with a wide spectrum of clinical severity. In recent years, outpatient management has been demonstrated to be safe and effective in selected low-risk patients, particularly those without hemodynamic instability or significant comorbidities. Risk stratification tools such as the Hestia rule are widely used to identify patients eligible for home treatment based on clinical criteria. However, uncertainty remains regarding the optimal management of patients who, despite having no clinical severity criteria according to the Hestia rule, present signs of right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) on imaging or elevated cardiac troponin levels. These markers are associated with an increased risk of adverse outcomes in some populations and are used in certain guidelines to classify patients as intermediate risk, often leading to hospitalization. In contrast, other recommendations do not require systematic cardiac assessment in clinically stable patients and support outpatient care in the absence of clinical severity criteria. As a result, clinical practice remains heterogeneous, and hospitalization is still frequently preferred in this subgroup despite limited prospective evidence. The HOME-PE2 study is designed to address this gap by comparing two commonly used management strategies-home treatment and hospitalization-in this specific population. The trial aims to determine whether outpatient management is non-inferior to hospitalization in terms of short-term safety, while also evaluating broader patient-centered and health system outcomes. HOME-PE2 is an international, multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled trial with blinded adjudication of clinical outcomes. Eligible adult patients presenting to the emergency department with objectively confirmed acute PE will be assessed for clinical severity using the Hestia rule. Patients without clinical criteria requiring hospitalization but with either RVD on imaging or elevated cardiac troponin levels will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either home treatment or hospitalization. Randomization will be stratified by country and by the qualifying cardiac abnormality. Patients allocated to the home treatment group will be discharged early after inclusion, according to predefined timelines consistent with outpatient management. Patients assigned to the hospitalization group will receive standard inpatient care according to local practice. In both groups, anticoagulant therapy will be initiated and managed according to current guidelines and local protocols. The study incorporates pragmatic features, including the comparison of usual care management strategies and flexibility in anticoagulation treatment according to local practice, thereby enhancing the generalizability of the findings to real-world clinical settings. All patients will receive structured follow-up over a 90-day period. Clinical follow-up will include scheduled assessments shortly after inclusion and at later time points, either through in-person visits aligned with routine care or via telephone contact. In addition, patient-reported outcomes will be collected longitudinally using validated instruments assessing health-related quality of life and functional status. Data on healthcare utilization, including hospital readmissions and length of stay, will also be collected. An independent clinical events committee, blinded to treatment allocation, will adjudicate all suspected outcome events based on predefined criteria to ensure consistency and reliability of endpoint assessment. Beyond safety, the study will evaluate the overall net clinical benefit of home treatment compared with hospitalization, integrating multiple clinically relevant outcomes in a hierarchical framework. It will also assess the impact of management strategy on patient-reported outcomes, including quality of life and functional recovery, as well as healthcare resource use. In addition, exploratory analyses will examine the influence of sex and living conditions on outcomes, in order to better understand potential differences in the feasibility and impact of outpatient care. A health-economic evaluation will be conducted to compare cost-utility and to estimate the potential budget impact of implementing outpatient management strategies in this population. By rigorously comparing home treatment and hospitalization in patients with acute PE without clinical severity but with cardiac involvement, the HOME-PE2 trial aims to generate high-quality evidence to inform clinical guidelines, improve patient-centered care, and optimize the use of healthcare resources.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
568
Outpatient management strategy for acute pulmonary embolism, including early discharge after diagnosis and initiation of anticoagulation therapy, with follow-up according to current guidelines and local practice.
Inpatient management strategy for acute pulmonary embolism, including hospital admission and standard care with anticoagulation therapy according to current guidelines and local practice.
Angers University Hospital, Emergency Department
Angers, France
Argenteuil hospital, Emergency department
Argenteuil, France
Brest University Hospital (site Cavale Blanche), Cardiology Department
Brest, France
Cholet Hospital, Emergency department
Cholet, France
Clermont-Ferrand University Hospital, Emergency department
Clermont-Ferrand, France
Paris University Hospital (APHP - site Louis Mourier), Emergency Department
Colombes, France
Grenoble University Hospital, Emergency Department
Grenoble, France
Le Mans Hospital, Emergency department
Le Mans, France
Lyon University Hospital (site Edouard Herriot), Emergency Department
Lyon, France
Nantes University Hospital, Emergency department
Nantes, France
...and 8 more locations
7-day composite incidence of adverse events (EARTH criteria)
Composite outcome defined according to the EARTH consensus, including the occurrence of any of the following events within 7 days after randomization: death possibly or confirmed to be related to pulmonary embolism (including death of undetermined cause), hemodynamic failure, respiratory failure, cardiac rhythm disorders requiring urgent treatment, major bleeding (according to ISTH definition), or recurrent venous thromboembolism (symptomatic pulmonary embolism or proximal deep vein thrombosis requiring treatment or modification of anticoagulation). All outcome events are adjudicated by an independent clinical events committee blinded to treatment allocation.
Time frame: Within 7 days following randomization
Net benefit at 7 days (hierarchical composite outcome)
Hierarchical composite outcome assessed using a win-ratio approach, including the following components in order of priority: death possibly or confirmed to be related to pulmonary embolism (including death of undetermined cause), hemodynamic failure, respiratory failure, cardiac rhythm disorders requiring urgent treatment, major bleeding (ISTH definition), recurrent venous thromboembolism (symptomatic pulmonary embolism or proximal deep vein thrombosis requiring treatment or modification of anticoagulation), non-major clinically relevant bleeding, unscheduled hospital presentations (all causes), and cumulative length of hospital stay.
Time frame: Within 7 days following randomization
Global health quality-of-life (short term)
Change over time in health-related quality of life assessed using the EQ-5D-5L questionnaire.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 0), Day 3, Day 7
Functional status (short term)
Change over time in patient-reported functional status assessed using the Post-VTE Functional Status (PVFS) scale.
Time frame: Pre-pulmonary embolism status estimated at inclusion, Day 0, Day 3, and Day 7
Composite incidence of major adverse events
Composite of all cause-death, recurrent venous thromboembolism and major bleeding
Time frame: Within 14 days, 30 days, and 90 days following randomization
Individual components of safety outcomes
Incidence of all cause-death, recurrent venous thromboembolism, major bleeding, non-major clinically relevant bleeding, pulmonary embolism -related mortality and fatal bleeding.
Time frame: Within 14 days, 30 days, and 90 days following randomization
Health-related quality of life
Longitudinal assessment of EQ-5D-5L scores over 90 days
Time frame: Baseline (Day 0), Days 3, 7, 14, 30, and 90
Functional status
Longitudinal assessment of the Post-VTE Functional Status (PVFS) over 90 days
Time frame: Pre-pulmonary embolism status estimated at inclusion, Day 0 and Days 3, 7, 14, 30 and 90
Hospital resources utilization
Number of unscheduled hospital presentations and cumulative lenght of in-hospital stay
Time frame: Within 14 days, 30 days, and 90 days following inclusion
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