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Diagnostic management of inpatients with a positive D‐dimer test: developing a new clinical decision‐making rule for pulmonary embolism
Author(s) -
Lei Min,
Liu Chang,
Luo Zhuang,
Xu Zhibo,
Jiang Youfan,
Lin Jiachen,
Wang Chu,
Jiang Depeng
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pulmonary circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.791
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2045-8940
DOI - 10.1177/2045894020943378
Subject(s) - medicine , pulmonary embolism , logistic regression , chest pain , pulmonary angiography , d dimer , computed tomographic angiography , radiology , computed tomographic , computed tomography angiography , pre and post test probability , angiography , prospective cohort study , cohort , cardiology , computed tomography
Background A positive D‐dimer test has high sensitivity but relatively poor specificity for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism, causing difficulty for clinicians unskilled in pulmonary embolism diagnosis in determining whether a patient with a positive D‐dimer test needs to undergo computed tomographic pulmonary angiography. Objectives We sought to develop a new clinical decision‐making rule based on a positive D‐dimer result to predict the probability of pulmonary embolism and to guide clinicians in making decisions regarding the need for computed tomographic pulmonary angiography. Methods We conducted a prospective, multicenter study in three hospitals in China. A total of 3014 inpatients with positive D‐dimer results were included. In the derivation group, we built a multivariate logistic regression model and deduced a regression equation from which our score was derived. Finally, we validated the score in an independent cohort. Results Our score included nine variables (points): chest pain (1.4), chest tightness (2.3), shortness of breath (3.6), hemoptysis (3.4), heart rate ≥100 beats/min (3.6), blood gas analysis (2.9), electrocardiogram presenting a typical S1Q3T3 pattern (4.1), electrocardiogram findings (2.4), and ultrasonic cardiogram findings (3.7). The sensitivities and specificities were 100% and 86.94%, respectively, in the derivation group and 100% and 90.82%, respectively, in the validation group. Additionally, the observed and predicted proportions of patients who underwent computed tomographic pulmonary angiography were 16.82% and 10.76%, respectively, in the derivation group and 18.72% and 11.40%, respectively, in the validation group. Conclusions The new score can categorize inpatients with a positive D‐dimer test as pulmonary embolism‐likely or pulmonary embolism‐unlikely, thus reducing unnecessary computed tomographic pulmonary angiography examinations.

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