4.3 Article

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

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Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/10760296221110879

Keywords

dimer; intensive coronary care unit; critical ill patients

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This study aimed to investigate the prognostic impact of D-dimer in intensive coronary care unit (ICCU) patients. The results showed that high D-dimer levels were associated with older age, more comorbidities, diverse admission diagnoses, and higher mortality rate. Therefore, D-dimer levels can serve as an independent poor prognostic factor in ICCU patients.
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.

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