| Literature DB >> 32492712 |
Hanny Al-Samkari1,2, Rebecca S Karp Leaf1,2, Walter H Dzik1,2, Jonathan C T Carlson1,2, Annemarie E Fogerty1,2, Anem Waheed1,2, Katayoon Goodarzi1,2, Pavan K Bendapudi1,2, Larissa Bornikova1,2, Shruti Gupta2,3, David E Leaf2,3, David J Kuter1,2, Rachel P Rosovsky1,2.
Abstract
Patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have elevated D-dimer levels. Early reports describe high venous thromboembolism (VTE) and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) rates, but data are limited. This multicenter retrospective study describes the rate and severity of hemostatic and thrombotic complications of 400 hospital-admitted COVID-19 patients (144 critically ill) primarily receiving standard-dose prophylactic anticoagulation. Coagulation and inflammatory parameters were compared between patients with and without coagulation-associated complications. Multivariable logistic models examined the utility of these markers in predicting coagulation-associated complications, critical illness, and death. The radiographically confirmed VTE rate was 4.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.9-7.3), and the overall thrombotic complication rate was 9.5% (95% CI, 6.8-12.8). The overall and major bleeding rates were 4.8% (95% CI, 2.9-7.3) and 2.3% (95% CI, 1.0-4.2), respectively. In the critically ill, radiographically confirmed VTE and major bleeding rates were 7.6% (95% CI, 3.9-13.3) and 5.6% (95% CI, 2.4-10.7), respectively. Elevated D-dimer at initial presentation was predictive of coagulation-associated complications during hospitalization (D-dimer >2500 ng/mL, adjusted odds ratio [OR] for thrombosis, 6.79 [95% CI, 2.39-19.30]; adjusted OR for bleeding, 3.56 [95% CI, 1.01-12.66]), critical illness, and death. Additional markers at initial presentation predictive of thrombosis during hospitalization included platelet count >450 × 109/L (adjusted OR, 3.56 [95% CI, 1.27-9.97]), C-reactive protein (CRP) >100 mg/L (adjusted OR, 2.71 [95% CI, 1.26-5.86]), and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) >40 mm/h (adjusted OR, 2.64 [95% CI, 1.07-6.51]). ESR, CRP, fibrinogen, ferritin, and procalcitonin were higher in patients with thrombotic complications than in those without. DIC, clinically relevant thrombocytopenia, and reduced fibrinogen were rare and were associated with significant bleeding manifestations. Given the observed bleeding rates, randomized trials are needed to determine any potential benefit of intensified anticoagulant prophylaxis in COVID-19 patients.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32492712 PMCID: PMC7378457 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020006520
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476
Baseline characteristics of patients included in the study (N = 400)
| Characteristic | Admitted, not critically ill (n = 256) | Critically ill (n = 144) |
|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (range), y | 60 (23-99) | 65 (32-97) |
| Female, % | 47.3 | 35.4 |
| White | 148 (57.8) | 95 (66.0) |
| Black | 43 (16.8) | 17 (11.8) |
| Asian or Pacific islander | 13 (5.1) | 6 (4.2) |
| Other | 42 (16.4) | 15 (10.4) |
| Not specified | 10 (3.9) | 11 (7.6) |
| Ethnicity, Hispanic or Latino | 74 (28.9) | 42 (29.2) |
| Discharged | 205 (80.1) | 18 (12.5) |
| Still admitted at end of study period | 49 (19.1) | 99 (68.75) |
| Deceased | 2 (0.8) | 27 (18.75) |
| Hospitalization complete | 6 (1-24) | 9 (2-23) |
| Hospitalization ongoing | 8 (2-18) | 12 (3-33) |
| None (mechanical thromboprophylaxis only) | 9 (3.5) | 2 (1.4) |
| Standard prophylactic anticoagulation | 230 (89.8) | 124 (86.1) |
| Intermediate or full-dose anticoagulation | 17 (6.6) | 18 (12.5) |
| Underweight (<18.5) | 3 (1.2) | 0 (0.0) |
| Normal weight (18.5-24.9) | 55 (21.5) | 28 (19.5) |
| Overweight (25.0-29.9) | 95 (37.1) | 54 (37.5) |
| Class I obesity (30.0-34.9) | 56 (21.9) | 29 (20.1) |
| Class II obesity (35.0-39.9) | 29 (11.3) | 20 (13.9) |
| Class III obesity (≥40.0) | 18 (7.0) | 13 (9.0) |
| Cardiovascular disease | 82 (32.0) | 43 (29.9) |
| Chronic lung disease | 53 (20.7) | 25 (17.4) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 65 (25.4) | 58 (40.3) |
| Immune compromise or suppression | 29 (11.3) | 20 (13.9) |
| Chronic kidney disease on dialysis | 4 (1.6) | 6 (4.2) |
| Chronic liver disease | 13 (5.1) | 6 (4.2) |
| Reside in nursing home or long-term care facility | 21 (8.2) | 7 (4.9) |
Unless otherwise noted, data are n (%).
Details are in supplemental Table 1.
Includes patients continuing on previously prescribed oral anticoagulants and patients with BMI <30 kg/m2 given subcutaneous enoxaparin at higher-than-standard dosing (eg, 40 mg, twice daily).
Bleeding events
| Patient sex | Age, y | Critically ill | Type(s) of bleeding | Platelet count at bleed(s), ×109/L | Anticoagulation at bleed(s) | WHO grade(s) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 67 | Yes | GI | 47 | Therapeutic (UFH) | 2 | On anticoagulation for pulmonary embolus and clotting of CVVH circuit at time of bleed |
| Male | 59 | No | Hemoptysis | 134 | None | 1 | Recurrent |
| Male | 62 | Yes | GI | 242 | Prophylactic (UFH) | 3 | |
| Male | 37 | No | Hemoptysis | 426 | Prophylactic (enoxaparin) | 2 | |
| Male | 68 | Yes | Oral mucosa bleeding | 227 | Prophylactic (enoxaparin) | 2 | Recurrent |
| Male | 56 | No | Epistaxis | 208 | Prophylactic (enoxaparin) | 2 | Recurrent |
| Male | 49 | Yes | Epistaxis; bleeding from multiple cannulation sites | 115; 184 | Prophylactic (enoxaparin) for both events | 3; 1 | Epistaxis recurrent and required otolaryngology consult and prolonged packing; DIC |
| Male | 59 | Yes | Bleeding from multiple cannulation sites; intracranial hemorrhage | 155; 257 | Therapeutic (UFH) for both events | 1; 4 | Fatal intracranial hemorrhage; DIC |
| Female | 65 | Yes | Internal bleeding | 177 | Prophylactic (UFH) | 3 | Recurrent; strong clinical suspicion of internal bleeding due to rapidly declining hemoglobin (>2 g/dL drop each time requiring transfusion) with no other cause (unable to scan) |
| Male | 69 | Yes | Oropharyngeal bleeding from tongue mass | 414 | Prophylactic (UFH) | 2 | Recurrent; required consult from otolaryngology and prolonged oral packing. Tongue mass was a suspected, but not a known, cancer. |
| Male | 34 | No | Hemoptysis | 142 | Therapeutic (UFH) | 1 | |
| Female | 44 | Yes | Pulmonary hemorrhage | 47 | Therapeutic (UFH) | 3 | Anticoagulated with impella in place; DIC |
| Male | 79 | Yes | GI | 297 | Therapeutic (UFH) | 3 | |
| Male | 67 | No | Spontaneous right kidney hematoma | 157 | Prophylactic (enoxaparin) | 2 | |
| Male | 59 | Yes | GI | 1 | None | 3 | Developed COVID-19–associated immune thrombocytopenia 3 d prior to bleed |
| Male | 83 | No | GI | 46 | Warfarin | 2 | INR: 6.5 at time of bleed |
| Male | 84 | No | GI | 66 | Warfarin | 2 | INR: 1.5 at time of bleed |
| Male | 70 | No | GI | 262 | Clopidogrel | 3 | |
| Male | 65 | Yes | GI | 59 | Prophylactic (enoxaparin) | 3 | |
GI, gastrointestinal.
Coagulation markers, inflammatory markers, and high-sensitivity cardiac troponin by patient group
| Marker | No thrombotic or bleeding complication (n = 347) | Thrombotic complication (n = 38) | Bleeding complication (n = 19) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | 891 (568-1503) | 1538 (953-3288) | 1189 (788-2577) | .083 | |
| Minimum | 760 (494-1189) | 1336 (833-1681) | 928 (605-1620) | .17 | |
| Peak | 1377 (818-3052) | 4001 (2896-8821) | 3625 (2135-4783) | ||
| Initial | 13.9 (13.1-14.8) | 13.8 (13.2-14.6) | .99 | 14.0 (13.3-14.8) | .44 |
| Minimum | 13.6 (12.9-14.3) | 13.5 (12.9-14.3) | .80 | 13.9 (13.0-14.3) | .51 |
| Peak | 14.4 (13.5-15.8) | 16.0 (14.7-16.8) | 16.3 (14.6-17.4) | ||
| Initial | 1.1 (1.0-1.2) | 1.1 (1.0-1.2) | .94 | 1.1 (1.0-1.2) | .58 |
| Minimum | 1.1 (1.0-1.1) | 1.1 (1.0-1.1) | .68 | 1.1 (1.0-1.2) | .43 |
| Peak | 1.1 (1.1-1.3) | 1.3 (1.2-1.4) | 1.3 (1.2-1.4) | ||
| Initial | 34.3 (30.8-39.1) | 34.3 (31.5-38.5) | .88 | 36.5 (30.4-38.4) | .72 |
| Minimum | 32.8 (29.6-36.3) | 30.6 (29.1-38.7) | .61 | 31.6 (28.3-37.3) | .80 |
| Peak | 37.0 (32.5-43.5) | 38.1 (34.0-47.8) | .56 | 47.5 (39.1-60.8) | .059 |
| Initial | 579 (481-696) | 696 (535-849) | 682 (405-838) | .50 | |
| Minimum | 549 (463-663) | 669 (528-753) | 486 (312-712) | .61 | |
| Peak | 662 (504-760) | 828 (666-976) | 703 (497-1081) | .19 | |
| Initial | 188 (153-233) | 206 (161-274) | .083 | 157 (132-220) | .072 |
| Minimum | 163 (130-210) | 179 (149-238) | .091 | 124 (95-154) | |
| Peak | 270 (197-366) | 283 (243-385) | .12 | 267 (153-353) | .23 |
| Initial | 63.3 (25.6-139.3) | 124.7 (55.5-163.1) | 46.6 (15.5-219.1) | .91 | |
| Minimum | 35.4 (12.7-73.7) | 94.2 (46.2-134.7) | 21.4 (4.9-120.3) | .64 | |
| Peak | 130.3 (54.2-216.0) | 277.7 (150.3-338.4) | 148.4 (88.6-301.0) | .18 | |
| Initial | 38 (23-58) | 47 (38-63) | 21 (14-52) | .22 | |
| Minimum | 36 (21-56) | 43 (34-59) | 21 (10-44) | .068 | |
| Peak | 56 (35-97) | 91 (54-124) | 65 (21-115) | .87 | |
| Initial | 504 (253-1007) | 825 (594-1249) | 739 (289-1305) | .32 | |
| Minimum | 453 (235-834) | 750 (554-1128) | 696 (289-901) | .49 | |
| Peak | 707 (348-1358) | 1182 (697-2081) | 1075 (533-1722) | .13 | |
| Initial | 0.13 (0.08-0.26) | 0.23 (0.13-0.43) | 0.20 (0.17-0.58) | ||
| Minimum | 0.13 (0.07-0.22) | 0.22 (0.12-0.43) | 0.20 (0.17-0.58) | ||
| Peak | 0.15 (0.08-0.37) | 0.55 (0.16-2.72) | 0.58 (0.19-3.48) | ||
| Initial | 10 (0-23) | 16 (8-29) | .051 | 14 (11-41) | |
| Minimum | 9 (0-19) | 16 (8-24) | 13 (8-39) | ||
| Peak | 6 (13-32) | 54 (18-118) | 35 (16-77) | ||
Bold P values represent statistical significance.
All data are median (interquartile range). Four patients had bleeding and thrombotic complications and were included in each group. For additional details regarding assays and reference ranges, see supplemental Table 2.
Of 347 patients, initial data were available for D-dimer in all patients; platelet count data were available for all patients; CRP data were available for 343 patients, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin data were available for 342 patients, ferritin data were available for 320 patients, procalcitonin data were available for 314 patients, ESR data were available for 262 patients, PT data were available for 260 patients, INR data were available for 260 patients, PTT data were available for 173 patients, and fibrinogen data were available for 151 patients. Peak and minimum values are included only for patients with initial values to ensure that the same population of patients contributed to each measure. Twenty-three patients were excluded from PT and INR analyses because of the use of warfarin or direct oral anticoagulants during all measurements, and 20 patients were excluded from PTT analyses because of the use of direct oral anticoagulants or heparin infusion during all measurements.
Of 38 patients, initial D-dimer data were available for all patients, platelet count data were available for all patients, CRP data were available for 35 patients, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin data were available for 35 patients, ferritin data were available for 35 patients, procalcitonin data were available for 34 patients, PT data were available for 34 patients, INR data were available for 34 patients, PTT data were available for 32 patients, fibrinogen data were available for 29 patients, and ESR data were available for 27 patients. Peak and minimum values are included only for patients with initial values to ensure that the same population of patients contributed to each measure. Two patients were excluded from PT, INR, and PTT analyses because of the use of apixaban during all measurements.
Mann-Whitney test.
Of 19 patients, initial data were available for D-dimer, platelet count, CRP, ferritin, and high-sensitivity cardiac troponin in all patients; procalcitonin data were available for 17 patients; PT data were available for 18 patients; INR data were available for 18 patients; fibrinogen data were available for 16 patients; PTT data were available for 15 patients; and ESR data were available for 15 patients. Peak and minimum values are included only for patients with initial values to ensure that the same population of patients contributed to each measure.
Individual measurements taken while receiving warfarin or direct oral anticoagulants were excluded from analysis.
Individual measurements taken while receiving heparin infusion or direct oral anticoagulants were excluded from analysis.
Figure 1Correlation matrix showing the strength of correlation between peak values of D-dimer and evaluated inflammatory parameters. Values in cells are Spearman correlation coefficients. All correlations were statistically significant (P < .0001). 95% CIs for each correlation coefficient can be found in supplemental Table 6.
Figure 2Association of coagulation and inflammatory parameters at initial presentation with thrombotic complications during hospitalization in univariable and multivariable analyses. aPTT, activated PTT.
Figure 3Association of coagulation and inflammatory parameters at initial presentation with bleeding events during hospitalization in univariable and multivariable analyses. aPTT, activated PTT.
Figure 4Association of coagulation and inflammatory parameters at initial presentation with critical illness in univariable and multivariable analyses. aPTT, activated PTT.
Figure 5Association of coagulation and inflammatory parameters at initial presentation with mortality during hospitalization in univariable and multivariable analyses. Analysis was limited to those patients reaching a terminal end point (hospital discharge or death) by the end of the study period (n = 252). aPTT, activated PTT.