A cross-speciality dialogue on pulmonary embolism management, examining risk stratification, classification systems, and evolving interventional strategies.




Pulmonary embolism is a high-risk, time-sensitive condition that requires rapid diagnosis and coordinated clinical decision-making across the acute care pathway. In practice, this involves complex, real-time decisions spanning initial assessment, imaging, haemodynamic instability, and urgent treatment selection.
It represents a true test case for modern multidisciplinary care, where emergency medicine, cardiology, pulmonology, critical care and interventional radiology must align on consistent approaches to patient assessment, risk stratification, and management.
This session brings together South Africa’s leading voices across these specialities to develop a shared, practical approach to contemporary PE management.
From early risk stratification and diagnostic classification through to treatment selection and the evolving role of multidisciplinary PERT pathways and interventional strategies, the panel will focus on the clinical decisions that matter most in practice — including patient stratification, timely escalation, and interpretation of emerging evidence within the South African context.
Delivered as an interactive, case-based panel discussion, this session is designed to move beyond guidelines and theory into real-world clinical decision-making — grounded in the realities of care in the emergency unit, inpatient setting, and outpatient clinic where pulmonary embolism is first encountered.
Four specialists, four disciplines — one shared goal of advancing how South Africa responds to pulmonary embolism. Click any card to read the full biography.



