Sunday, November 28 | 11:35 a.m.-11:45 a.m. | SSA04-06 | Room S404CD
Gauging the clot burden in pulmonary embolism (PE) patients at CT pulmonary angiography is important for management and treatment. For most but not all patients, assessment can be performed faster using an automated clot burden assessment tool, researchers will report in this Sunday session.David Fetzer, MD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues will discuss how they compared semiquantitative methods with an automated volumetric measurement tool developed at the facility in 641 patients with PE.
When the clot burden is mostly central, completely automated measurement clot volume correlated well with semiquantitative methods that apply quantitative clot volume measurements to traditional Qanadli pulmonary artery obstruction index (PAOI) and Mastora (G, C, and P) scores, the group said.
However, in patients with more peripheral clot burden, traditional semiquantitative scores were less well correlated to volume measurements, significantly underestimating subsegmental PE burden.














![Axial images from unenhanced calcium score cardiac CT (left) and curved planar reformation images from CT angiography (right) show that higher long-term exposure to air pollution is associated with greater coronary artery calcium and more obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). Top row: Images in a 68-year-old male patient with higher 10-year mean ambient air pollution exposure (7.9 μg/m3 for particulate matter measuring ≤2.5 μm in diameter [PM2.5] and 17.4 parts per billion [ppb] for NO2) with extensive CAD (coronary artery calcium score [CACS] >1,000 and obstructive CAD [≥70% diameter stenosis]). Bottom row: Images in a 57-year-old female patient with lower 10-year mean ambient air pollution exposure (6.3 μg/m3 for PM2.5 and 4.6 ppb for NO2) with no CAD (CACS = 0 and no obstructive stenosis).](https://img.auntminnie.com/mindful/smg/workspaces/default/uploads/2026/06/hanneman.r6SMLzkezo.png?auto=format%2Ccompress&fit=crop&h=112&q=70&w=112)




