Researchers find new way to interpret blood tests to diagnose pulmonary embolism

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Researchers find new way to interpret blood tests to diagnose pulmonary embolism

A study led by Hamilton researchers has found a new way to interpret blood test results in patients who are investigated for blood clots in their lungs, a condition known as pulmonary embolism.

This new approach applies to D-dimer blood tests, which are used by physicians to rule out the presence of a blood clot. Researchers found that a higher than usual D-dimer level can be considered a negative result if the physician has assessed the patient as having a low probability of having a pulmonary embolism.

The study team notes the findings are important as they mean a lot fewer patients need a computerized tomography (CT) scan, which results in patients avoiding radiation exposure and spending less time in the emergency department. The health system also benefits, they say, as it frees up CT scans for other patients and it improves the ability to move patients more quickly through the emergency department.

The study results were published today in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The primary goal of diagnostic testing for pulmonary embolism is to identify which patients should be treated with anticoagulant agents and which should not. When a physician is concerned that pulmonary embolism may be present, chest imaging with CT pulmonary angiography is usually done in half of these patients. We wanted to find a way to reduce the number of CT scans that need to be done."
Clive Kearon, first author, professor of medicine at McMaster University and a thrombosis specialist with Hamilton Health Sciences.
A total of 2,017 patients aged 18 and older were enrolled and evaluated in the study, of which seven percent had pulmonary embolism on initial diagnostic testing. The average age of the patients was 52 years, and 66 percent were female.

Of the patients in the study, 73 percent, or 1,474, were enrolled at Hamilton Health Sciences or St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton.

These patients and those at other university-based clinical centers in Canada were tested from December 2015 through May 2018 and assessed 90 days later.

Of the 1,325 patients identified by an emergency department physician as having a low (1,285 of the patients) or a moderate (40 patients) probability of having a pulmonary embolism and who had negative D-dimer results (that is, less than 1,000 or 500 nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL) respectively), none had venous thromboembolism during follow-up.

"Our analyses show that pulmonary embolism is ruled out by a D-dimer level of less than 1,000 ng/mL in patients with a low probability, and by a D-dimer level of less than 500 ng/mL in patients with a moderate probability. This way of using D-dimer testing and clinical assessment reduced the need for CT scanning by one-third," said Kearon.

"This was a collaborative study among thrombosis and emergency medicine physicians and researchers. Dr. Kerstin de Wit, who is emergency medicine and thrombosis specialist, was key to this research and to the study's translation."
McMaster University

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