| Literature DB >> 30707716 |
Jing Zhang1, Lin Liu2, Jie Tao3, Yanlin Song1, Yimeng Fan1, Maling Gou3, Jianguo Xu1.
Abstract
OBJECT: The purpose of our study was to assess the prognostic role of early D-dimer level in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30707716 PMCID: PMC6358072 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0211458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Selection process of studies.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Author | Year | Country | N (F/M) | Mean age (Yrs) | Onset to admission | Sample time | TOAST Subtypes (LAA/CE/SVO/other) | D-dimer assay | Cut-off | Endpoints | Univariate | Multivariate | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kang | 2009 | South Korea | 153 | 64.6 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | 28.1%/21.6%/ | ITA | per 1 Log D-dimer | 5D DWI | positive | positive | 9 |
| Abdel Ghani | 2011 | Egypt | 50 | 60.6 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | 20.0%/42.0%/ | ITA | NR | 5D DWI | positive | positive | 8 |
| Welsh | 2009 | UK | 180 | 69 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | NR | ELISA | NR | 30D | positive | positive | 9 |
| Wang | 2016 | China | 1173 | 66.7 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | 23.1%/5.4%/ | ITA | NR | 30D | positive | positive | 9 |
| Shibazaki | 2009 | Japan | 335 | 72.3 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | 8.1%/39.7%/ | NR | >1.4 mg/L | 30D | positive | NS | 9 |
| Uestuendag | 2010 | Turkey | 91 | 64.5 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | 25.3%/28.6%/ | ITA | NR | 30D | positive | negative | 8 |
| Sienkiewicz-Jarosz | 2009 | Poland | 54 | 73.3 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | NR | ITA | NR | 90D | positive | positive | 8 |
| Whiteley | 2012 | UK | 268 | 74.4 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | NR | ELISA | 75th to the | 90D | positive | NS | 9 |
| Park | 2013 | South Korea | 175 | 66 | ≤24 hours | ≤24 hours | 29.7%/28.0%/ | ELISA | NR | 90D | positive | NS | 8 |
N (F/M): number of patients (Female/Male), Yrs: years, TOAST subtypes: proportion of main stroke subtypes by Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment (TOAST) (large-artery atherosclerosis, LAA/cardioembolism, CE/small-vessel occlusion, SVO/stroke of other determined etiology or stroke of undetermined etiology), NR: not reported, ITA: immunoturbidimetric assay, ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, 5D DWI recurrence: recurrence on 5-day diffusion-weighted imaging, mRS: modified Rankin Scale, 30D mRS≥3: poor functional outcome at 30 days, 30D mortality: mortality at 30 days, 90D mRS≥3: poor functional outcome at 90 days
* positive: higher D-dimer level was associated with worse outcome; negative: higher D-dimer level was associated with better outcome; NS: not significant; Kang adjusted for baseline infarct volume, acute multiple infarcts on initial DWI, time from onset to initial MRI, stroke subtype, anticoagulation versus antiplatelets or none; Abdel Ghani adjusted for infarction volume, onset to initial DW-MRI, atherosclerosis, acute multiple infarction; Welsh adjusted for age, stroke subtype, admission Scandinavian Stroke Scale score, atrial fibrillation on ECG, C-Reactive protein, fibrinogen, IL-6, leukocyte count, vWF antigen, factor VIIIc, factor Ixc, prothrombin F1+2, thrombin-antithrombin complex; Wang adjusted for age, sex, hypertension, diabetes, smoking, hyperlipidemia; Shibazaki adjusted for atrial fibrillation, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, glucose, albumin, brain natriuretic peptide; Uestuendag adjusted for atrial fibrillation, left ventricular hypertrophy, left atrial thrombus, stroke subtype, length of stay in acute hospital; Sienkiewicz-Jarosz adjusted for National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, Barthel Index, atrial fibrillation, neuron-specific enolase, S100B protein, C-Reactive protein, glucose, taurine; Whiteley adjusted for age, initial National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score; Park adjusted for age, initial National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score.
Fig 2Forest plots.
Pooled odds ratios (ORs) of higher D-dimer levels for different endpoints in patients with acute ischemic stroke.