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D-Dimer as a Prognostic Factor in a Tertiary Center Intensive Coronary Care Unit

Authors :
Moshe Rav Acha MD
Louay Taha MD
Anna Turyan MD
Rivka Farkash MPH
Feras Bayya MD
Mohammad Karmi MD
Yoed Steinmetz MD
Fauzi Fadi Shaheen MD
Nimrod Perel MD
Kamal Hamayel MD
Nir Levi MD
Hani Karameh MD
Ariella Tvito MD
Michael Glikson MD
Elad Asher MD-MHA
Source :
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis, Vol 28 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction D-dimer is a small protein fragment produced during fibrinolysis. High D-dimer levels were shown to have prognostic impact in critically ill patients. Nevertheless, data regarding D-dimer's prognostic impact among tertiary care intensive coronary care unit (ICCU) patients is scarce. Material and method All patients admitted to the ICCU between 1-12/2020 were prospectively included. Based on admission D-dimer level, patients were categorized into low and high D-dimer groups (< 500 ng/ml and ≥ 500 ng/ml) and also to age-adjusted D-dimer cutoff (500 ng/ml for ages ≤ 50 years old and age*10 for ages>50 years old). Results and discussion A total of 959 consecutive patients were included, including 296 (27.4%) and 663 (61.3%) patients with low and high D-Dimer levels, respectively. Patients with high D-dimer level were older compared with patients with low D-dimer level (age 70.4 ± 15 and 59 ± 13 years, p = 0.004) and had more comorbidities. The most common primary diagnosis on admission among the low D-dimer group was acute coronary syndrome (ACS) (74.3%), while in the high D-dimer group it was a combination of ACS (33.6%), cardiac structural interventions (26.7%) and various arrhythmias (21.1%). High D-dimer levels were associated with increased mortality rate, even after adjustment for age, gender, comorbidities and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). High D-dimer levels were independently associated with increased overall 1-year mortality rate (HR = 5.8; 95% CI; 1.7-19.1; p = 0.004). Conclusion Elevated D-dimer levels on admission in ICCU patients is an independently poor prognostic factor for in-hospital morbidity and 1-year overall mortality rate following hospitalization.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19382723 and 10760296
Volume :
28
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.48468839de454ee48ab73f00fa00197b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/10760296221110879