Age-related diagnostic value of D-dimer testing and the role of inflammation in patients with suspected deep vein thrombosis

  • Jürgen H Prochaska
  • Bernd Frank
  • Markus Nagler
  • Heidrun Lamparter
  • Gerhard Weißer
  • Andreas Schulz
  • Lisa Eggebrecht
  • Sebastian Göbel
  • Natalie Arnold
  • Marina Panova-Noeva
  • Iris Hermanns
  • Antonio Pinto
  • Stavros Konstantinides
  • Hugo Ten Cate
  • Karl J Lackner
  • Thomas Münzel
  • Christine Espinola-Klein
  • Philipp S Wild

Related Research units

Abstract

Previous reports have investigated the impact of age on D-Dimer testing in elderly individuals with suspected deep vein thrombosis (DVT), but data on the age-related diagnostic value of D-dimer in a sample covering a broad age range are limited. The present study determined age-specifically the diagnostic accuracy of D-dimer and compared it to C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of inflammation, in 500 patients with suspected DVT from the VTEval project (NCT02156401). Sensitivity of D-dimer was lower in patients < 60 years in comparison to patients ≥ 60 years (∆-16.8%), whereas specificity was 27.9% higher. Lowest levels of sensitivity were detected for female sex, unprovoked DVT, low thrombotic burden, and distal DVT. A fixed D-dimer threshold of 0.25 mg/L FEU resulted in elevated sensitivity for patients < 60 with a reduction of false negatives by 40.0% for proximal DVT and by 50.0% for distal DVT. In patients < 60 years, D-dimer and CRP demonstrated comparable diagnostic performance for both proximal and distal DVT (p > 0.05). In conclusion, these data outline a clinically-relevant limitation of D-dimer testing among younger patients with suspected DVT indicating a necessity for age-adapted cut-off values. Further research is required to decrypt the role of inflammation in the pathophysiology and diagnosis of venous thrombosis.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.07.2017
PubMed 28676651