| Literature DB >> 33282060 |
Sara Oualim1, Salma Abdeladim1, Amal El Ouarradi1, Ilham Bensahi1, Sara Hafid1, Abdelhamid Naitlho2, Elarbi Bouaiti3, Mohamed Sabry1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: coronavirus disease is now a global pandemic due to rapid human-to-human transmission. It can cause mild to fatal respiratory, cardiovascular, and neurological diseases. We aimed to find out whether elevated D-dimer levels are a predictor of the bad progression of COVID-19 to help reducing the mortality.Entities:
Keywords: Coronavirus disease; D-dimer; mortality; prognosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33282060 PMCID: PMC7687553 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.35.2.24692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
baseline characteristics of 89 patients with COVID-19
| Variable | Total n = 89 | D-dimer on admission < 668 n = 55 | D-dimer on admission > 668 n = 34 | p-value | D-dimer on day 5< 1360 n = 69 | D-dimer on day 5> 1360 n = 20 | p- value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 48 (28-68) | 45 ( 25- 65) | 52 ( 33- 71) | 0.40 | 43 ( 23- 63) | 57 (26- 88) | 0.09 | |
| 26 (29.2) | 13 (26) | 13 (33.3) | 0.45 | 17 ( 24.6) | 9 ( 45) | 0.078 | |
| 39 (43.8) | 20 (40) | 19 ( 48.7) | 0.41 | 30 (43.5) | 9 (45) | 0.9 | |
| 40 (44.9%) | 21 (20) | 19 (55) | 1.1 | 25 (36) | 15 (75) | 1.4 | |
| 22 (25) | 11 (22) | 11 (28.9) | 0.45 | 15 (22) | 7 (35) | 0.24 | |
| 12 (13.6) | 7 (14) | 5 (13.2) | 0.90 | 6 (8.8) | 6 (30) | 0.015 | |
| 5 (5.7) | 2 (5.3) | 3 (6) | 0.88 | 3 (4.4) | 2 (10) | 0.34 | |
| 1 (1.1) | 1 (2.6) | 0 (0) | 1.33 | 1 (1.5) | 0 ( 0) | 0.58 | |
| 52 (58.4) | 22 (56.4) | 30 (60) | 0.73 | 40 (58) | 12 (60) | 0.87 | |
| 51 (57) | 20 (51.3) | 31(62) | 0.31 | 42 (60.9) | 9 (45) | 0.20 | |
| 26 (29.2) | 11 (28.2) | 15 (30) | 0.85 | 21 (30.4) | 5 (25) | 0.63 | |
| 24 (27.3) | 8 (21.1) | 16 (32) | 0.25 | 17 (25) | 7 (35) | 0.37 | |
| 18 (20.2) | 9 (23.1) | 9 (18) | 0,55 | 14 ( 20.3) | 4 ( 20) | 0.97 | |
| 6.5 (4.09, 8.6) | 6.71 (4.56, 8.53) | 6.24 (4.2, 8.26) | 0.16 | 6.69 (4.8, 8.5) | 6.8 (4.8, 8.8) | 0.760 | |
| 14 (12.7, 15.3) | 14.1 (12.6, 15.5) | 13.8 (12.5, 15.07) | 0.46 | 13.5 (12.7, 14.3) | 14.2 (13.5, 14.9) | 0.41 | |
| 241 (164, 318) | 249 (174, 328) | 232 (153, 311) | 0.07 | 229 (120, 338) | 250 (177, 323) | 0.6 | |
| 43 (3, 107) | 32 (2, 62) | 58 (3, 113) | 0.024 | 36 (4, 68) | 67 (5, 129) | 0.002 | |
| Creatinine- mg/L (IQR) | 9.3 (3.3, 15.3) | 8.77 (4.47, 13.07) | 11.18 (1.9, 20.3) | 0.001 | 10 (6.5, 14.5) | 15.6 (2, 28) | <0.001 |
| 1204 (1, 3300) | 555 (10, 1767) | 2011 (13, 4627) | <0.001 | / | / | / | |
| 37 | 12 | 25 | <0.001 | 19 | 18 | <0.0001 | |
| 12.3 (7.3, 17.3) | 10.4 (7, 13.8) | 14.8 ( 9, 20.6) | 0.008 | 11 (7, 15) | 17 ( 10, 25) | 0.005 | |
| 10 (11.2) | 1 (0.018) | 9 ( 26.4) | <0.001 | 0 | 10 | < 0.001 |
Data are mean±SD, median (IQR), n (%). p values were calculated by t test, Mann-Whitney U test, χ2 test, or Fisher’s exact test, as appropriate. IQR: inter-quartile range; CRP: C-reaction protein.
C-statistic of routine tests to predict mortality in patients with COVID-19
| Routine laboratory tests | C-index | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| 0.775 | 0.674- 0.857 | |
| 0.946 | 0.876- 0.982 | |
| 0.910 | 0.831- 0.960 | |
| 0.631 | 0.522- 0.731 | |
| 0.824 | 0.729- 0.897 | |
| 0.547 | 0.438-0.653 |
CI: Confidential interval
Figure 1ROC curve showing validity of D-Dimer values in predicting mortality for COVID-19 patients.
Figure 2Kaplan –Meier survival curves: (A) for D-dimer levels on admission (p = 0.11); (B) for D-dimer levels on day 5 (P = 0.0002)
Figure 3scatter graph showing correlation between D-dimer levels on admission and 5 days after admission (r = -0.73; p <0.001)