Abstract
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Elevated Plasma D-Dimer in Adult Community-Acquired Pneumonia Patients is Associated with an Increased Inflammatory Reaction and Lower Survival
by Yan L. Ge, Cong H. Liu, Nan Wang, Jing Xu, Xiao Y. Zhu, Chuan S. Su, Hui L. Li, Hai F. Zhang, Zhen Z. Li, Hong L. Li, Xue Zhang, Hao Chen,
Hua L. Yu, Ai S. Fu, Hong Y. Wang
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Background: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a common infectious disease. Inflammatory reaction and prognosis assessment in adult CAP patients are useful for CAP site of care decisions. Most CAP patients were diagnosed in an out-patient or emergency department, so a simple, cheap and rapidly available measurement to assess inflammatory reaction and prognosis has the prospect of broad application. The aim of this study was to investigate the usefulness of plasma D-Dimer in assessment of inflammatory reaction and prognosis in adult CAP patients.
Methods: A retrospective study was conducted. All adult patients with a primary diagnosis of CAP were included and were evaluated by peripheral plasma D-Dimer test. All of the measurement data were analyzed with paired t-test and the enumeration data were analyzed with χ2 test. Correlative factor analysis was performed between D-Dimer levels and serum inflammatory markers (WBC, hs-CRP, PCT) and prognostic indexes (ICU admission and 30-day mortality). Receiver operating characteristic curves (ROC) were used to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of D-Dimer in predicting ICU admission and/or 30-day mortality.
Results: One hundred fifty patients were included. Compared with non-D-Dimer elevated group, serum inflammatory markers (WBC, hs-CRP, PCT) and prognostic indexes (ICU admission and 30-day mortality) were elevated in the D-Dimer elevated group (p < 0.05). D-Dimer had positive correlation with serum inflammatory markers (WBC, hs-CRP, PCT), the rates of ICU admission and 30-day mortality, and scores of CURB-65. The AUC of ROC curve of D-Dimer was 0.880 (95% CI 0.823 to 0.936), the sensitivity was 80.4% and specificity was 79.8%, D-Dimer levels are superior to hs-CRP and PCT in predicting 30-day mortality and/or ICU admission according to AUCs of the ROC curves.
Conclusions: Elevated plasma D-Dimer in adult CAP patients is associated with an increased inflammatory reaction and ICU admission and 30-day mortality. It can be a simple, cheap, and rapidly available measurement to assess inflammatory reaction and prognosis in adult CAP patients.
DOI: 10.7754/Clin.Lab.2018.180720
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