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Crit Care Med . D-dimer and Death in Critically Ill Patients With Coronavirus Disease 2019

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  • Crit Care Med . D-dimer and Death in Critically Ill Patients With Coronavirus Disease 2019


    Crit Care Med


    . 2021 Feb 12.
    doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000004917. Online ahead of print.
    D-dimer and Death in Critically Ill Patients With Coronavirus Disease 2019


    Samuel A P Short 1 , Shruti Gupta, Samantha K Brenner, Salim S Hayek, Anand Srivastava, Shahzad Shaefi, Harkarandeep Singh, Benjamin Wu, Aranya Bagchi, Hanny Al-Samkari, Rajany Dy, Katherine Wilkinson, Neil A Zakai, David E Leaf, STOP-COVID Investigators



    Affiliations

    Abstract

    Objectives: Hypercoagulability may be a key mechanism for acute organ injury and death in patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019, but the relationship between elevated plasma levels of D-dimer, a biomarker of coagulation activation, and mortality has not been rigorously studied. We examined the independent association between D-dimer and death in critically ill patients with coronavirus disease 2019.
    Design: Multicenter cohort study.
    Setting: ICUs at 68 hospitals across the United States.
    Patients: Critically ill adults with coronavirus disease 2019 admitted to ICUs between March 4, 2020, and May 25, 2020, with a measured D-dimer concentration on ICU day 1 or 2.
    Interventions: None.
    Measurements and main results: The primary exposure was the highest normalized D-dimer level (assessed in four categories: < 2?, 2-3.9?, 4-7.9?, and ≥ 8? the upper limit of normal) on ICU day 1 or 2. The primary endpoint was 28-day mortality. Multivariable logistic regression was used to adjust for confounders. Among 3,418 patients (63.1% male; median age 62 yr [interquartile range, 52-71 yr]), 3,352 (93.6%) had a D-dimer concentration above the upper limit of normal. A total of 1,180 patients (34.5%) died within 28 days. Patients in the highest compared with lowest D-dimer category had a 3.11-fold higher odds of death (95% CI, 2.56-3.77) in univariate analyses, decreasing to a 1.81-fold increased odds of death (95% CI, 1.43-2.28) after multivariable adjustment for demographics, comorbidities, and illness severity. Further adjustment for therapeutic anticoagulation did not meaningfully attenuate this relationship (odds ratio, 1.73; 95% CI, 1.36-2.19).
    Conclusions: In a large multicenter cohort study of critically ill patients with coronavirus disease 2019, higher D-dimer levels were independently associated with a greater risk of death.


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