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RESEARCH PRODUCT
D-Dimer and thrombus burden in acute pulmonary embolism.
Jörn O. BalzerKarsten KellerJohannes BeuleWolfgang Dippoldsubject
Malemedicine.medical_specialtyVentricular Dysfunction Right030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyLogistic regressionFibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineD-dimerLinear regressionmedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineAgedRetrospective StudiesVenous Thrombosisbusiness.industryCancerGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasePrognosisPulmonary embolismVenous thrombosisPneumoniaROC CurveThrombus burdenAcute DiseaseEmergency MedicineCardiologyFemalebusinessPulmonary EmbolismBiomarkersdescription
Abstract Background Thrombus burden in pulmonary embolism (PE) is associated with higher D-Dimer-levels and poorer prognosis. We aimed to investigate i) the influence of right ventricular dysfunction (RVD), deep venous thrombosis (DVT), and high-risk PE-status on D-Dimer-levels and ii) effectiveness of D-Dimer to predict RVD in normotensive PE patients. Methods Overall, 161 PE patients were analyzed retrospectively, classified in 5 subgroups of thrombus burden according to clinical indications and compared regarding D-Dimer-levels. Linear regression models were computed to investigate the association between D-Dimer and the groups. In hemodynamically stable PE patients, a ROC curve was calculated to assess the effectiveness of D-Dimer for predicting RVD. Results Overall, 161 patients (60.9% females, 54.0% aged >70 years) were included in this analysis. The D-Dimer-level was associated with group-category in a univariate linear regression model (β 0.050 (95%CI 0.002–0.099), P = .043). After adjustment for age, sex, cancer, and pneumonia in a multivariate model we observed an association between D-Dimer and group-category with borderline significance (β 0.047 (95%CI 0.002–0.096), P = .058). The Kruskal-Wallis test demonstrated that D-Dimer increased significantly with higher group-category. In 129 normotensive patients, patients with RVD had significantly higher D-Dimer values compared to those without (1.73 (1.11/3.48) vs 1.17 (0.65/2.90) mg/l, P = .049). A ROC curve showed an AUC of 0.61, gender non-specific, with calculated optimal cut-off of 1.18 mg/l. Multi-variate logistic regression model confirmed an association between D-Dimer >1.18 mg/l and RVD (OR2.721 (95%CI 1.196–6.190), P = .017). Conclusions Thrombus burden in PE is related to elevated D-Dimer levels, and D-Dimer values >1.18 mg/l were predictive for RVD in normotensive patients. D-Dimer levels were influenced by DVT, but not by cancer, pneumonia, age, or renal impairment.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-09-01 | The American journal of emergency medicine |