| Literature DB >> 34922573 |
Flavio Giuseppe Biccirè1,2, Alessio Farcomeni3, Carlo Gaudio1, Pasquale Pignatelli1, Gaetano Tanzilli1, Daniele Pastori4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Data on the prognostic role of D-dimer in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) are controversial. Our aim was to summarize current evidence on the association between D-dimer levels and short/long-term poor prognosis of ACS patients. We also investigated the association between D-dimer and no-reflow phenomenon.Entities:
Keywords: Acute coronary syndrome; D-dimer; Myocardial infarction; No-reflow phenomenon; Prognosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34922573 PMCID: PMC8684263 DOI: 10.1186/s12959-021-00354-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb J ISSN: 1477-9560
Clinical characteristics of studies investigating major adverse cardiac events and all-cause mortality included in the systematic review
| Author/ year | Setting | N | Age (years) | Women (%) | Study Design | FU (months) | Endpoints | D-dimer | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biccirè 2021 [ | STEMI | 132 | 64 | 19.1 | R | In-hospital | Adverse events (cardiogenic shock, resuscitated cardiac arrest and death). | Events vs control group: log-transformed D-dimer 6.8 ± 1.1 vs 6.3 ± 0.8, | Patients experiencing in-hospital adverse events had higher values of D-dimer compared to those free from events. |
| Huang 2020 [ | STEMI | 1165 | 63.5 | 17 | R | In-hospital | CVEs including cardiac death, non-fatal AMI, revascularization, and stroke. | ≥ 800 vs < 800 ng/mL | Increased D-dimer level predicted CVEs (OR 8.408, 95% CI 4.065–17.392, In the subgroup with no-reflow phenomenon, increased D-dimer predicted CVEs (OR 8.114, 95%CI 1.598–41.196, |
| Luo 2020 [ | STEMI | 400 | 62.5 | 21 | R | 12 | CVEs (all-cause death, TVR, MI, UA, HF, stroke or TIA) | Groups (μg/L) 1: 74.0; 2: 146.0; 3: 256.5; 4: 576.0. | The incidence of CVEs and all-cause mortality within 30 days ( |
| Qi Zhou 2020 [ | STEMI | 872 | 63.7 | 19.8 | R | 29 | All-cause mortality | Groups (μg/mL) 1: ≤0.33; 2: 0.33–0.64; 3: 0.64–1.33; 4: ≥1.33. | Higher in-hospital HF (40.2 vs 10.2%, 84 patients died. Group 4 was a predictor of all-cause mortality (HR: 2.53, 95%CI 1.02–6.26, |
| Lin 2020 [ | STEMI | 550 | 63.5 | 12.2 | P | 16 | CI-AKI, in-hospital outcomes and long-term mortality and CVEs § | D-dimer quartiles (μg/mL): 1: < 0.38; 2: 0.38–0.67; 3: 0.68–1.03; 4: > 1.03 . | D-dimer > 0.69 μg/mL was an independent risk factor for long-term mortality (HR: 3.41 [95% CI, 1.4–8.03], |
| Zhang 2018 [ | STEMI | 926 | 52.6 | 54.7 | P | In-hospital | Mortality | 383.1 ng/mL ± 264.2 | Patients without pre-infarction angina with high D-dimer level on admission had significantly increased in-hospital mortality compared to the other patients ( |
| Gao 2018 [ | STEMI with T2DM | 822 | 62.5 | 46.1 | P | 100 | Mortality | D-dimer 430.0 ng/mL ± 256.8 | Patients with high plasma D-dimer level on admission showed a significantly shorter survival time ( |
| Hansen 2018 [ | STEMI | 971 | 61 | 20 | cross-sectional cohort study | 55 | Composite of all-cause mortality, reinfarction, stroke, unscheduled revascularization, HF rehospitalization Secondary outcome was total mortality | Median D-dimer 456 ng/mL (IQR 286–801). | Adjusted OR for composite endpoints for D-dimer above 456 ng/mL: 1.179 (95% CI, 0.814–1.706 Adjusted OR for total mortality for D-dimer above 456 ng/mL: 2.01 (95% CI, 1.06–3.83; |
| Sarli 2015 [ | STEMI | 266 | 64 | 38 | P | in-hospital | CVEs: nonfatal MI, in-stent thrombosis, and in-hospital mortality during hospitalization. | D-dimer (μg/l): 686 (±236) vs 418 (±164), | D-dimer level predicted CVEs (OR: 1.002; 95% CI: 1.000–1.004; Optimal cut-off value was 544 μg/mL for CVEs. |
| Erkol 2014 [ | STEMI | 569 | 56 | 16 | A | 38 | Mortality and CVEs (death, non-fatal MI, stroke, revascularization, and advanced HF at long-term follow-up) | D-dimer overall 0.40 mg/L (0.20–0.87). | Univariable HR for long-term mortality 1.56 (95%CI, 1.24–1.95, p < 0.001) and CVEs 1.60 (95%CI, 1.37–1.83, |
| HORIZONS-AMI substudy 2014 [ | STEMI | 461 | 1st: 55.8 2nd: 61.0 3rd: 70.2 | 20.61 | R | 36 | CVEs (composite of all-cause death, recurrent MI, stroke, or TVR for ischemia.) | Tertiles (μg/mL): 1: < 0.30 ( 2: 0.30–0.71 ( 3: ≥0.71 ( | D-dimer levels ≥0.71 μg/mL on admission predicted CVEs (HR 2.58 [95% CI, 1.44–4.63], |
| Ozgur Akgul 2013 [ | STEMI | 453 | 55.6 | 19.65 | P | 6 | Mortality | High D-dimer group: > 0.72 μg/mL; Low D-dimer group: lowest two tertiles (≤0.72 μg/mL). | Highest tertile of D-dimer associated with in-hospital CV mortality and 6-month all-cause mortality (7.2 vs. 0.6%, Fatal reinfarction, advanced HF, and CVEs were more frequent in high D-dimer group (p < 0.001). |
| Pineda 2010 [ | AMI STEMI (85.9%) | 142 | 41 | 8.45 | P | 36 | Adverse CV events included stroke, ACS, CABG/PCI, hospitalisation due to congestive HF, CV and global mortality. | Event 360.0 ng/mL vs no event 297.5 ng/mL, | No significant differences in D-dimer levels in the event group. |
| Lu 2021 [ | NSTEMI | 1357 | 65 | 31.4 | P | 12 | Mortality and CVEs including all-cause death, hospital admission for UA and/or HF, nonfatal recurrent MI and stroke) | 0.380 μg/mL (0.27–0.65) Event group (mortality at 1 year): 0.95 (0.50, 2.00) Control group: 0.37 (0.26, 0.60) | HR for D-dimer for 1-year death and CVEs: 2.12 (95%CI, 1.50–2.99, p < 0.0001). |
| Hulusi Satilmisoglu 2017 [ | NSTEMI | 234 | 57.2 | 24.8 | R | 14 | Mortality | Non-survivors: 1568 ± 1489 ng/mL Survivors: 632 ± 995 ng/mL | D-dimer correlated with GRACE (r = 0.215, |
| Tello-Montoliu 2007 [ | NSTEMI | 358 | 67.4 | 35.8 | R | 6 | Death, new ACS, revascularization, and HF | Overall D-dimer level: 340 (211–615) ng/mL | Admission D-dimer levels did not predict events [HR: 1.26 (0.79–2.02), |
| Fu 2020 [ | AMI with ESRD | 113 | 69.2 | 33.6 | R | In-hospital | Mortality | Mortality: 3.2 mg/L Survival: 1.1 mg/L | D-dimer ≥2.4 mg/L predicted in-hospital mortality (OR 2.771 [95% CI, 1.017–8.947], p < 0.001). |
| Wang 2020 [ | AMI | 197 | Male 61.8 Female 74.2 | 20 | P | 6 | All-cause mortality (in- and out-of-hospital deaths) or readmission. | Male D-dimer (mg/L) 0.4 vs 1.0 Female D-dimer (mg/L) 0.4 vs 0.6 | HR for continuous D-dimer in women 2.029 (95%CI, 1.403–2.933; p < 0.001). D-dimer ≥0.43 mg/L as an independent predictor of poor prognosis in female AMI patients. |
| Zhang 2020 [ | AMI | 4495 | 62 | 31.03 | P | 24 | All-cause mortality | < 145 ng/mL ≥145 ng/mL | Elevated D-dimer was associated with mortality (univariable HR 1.20, 95%CI, 1.04–1.37, p = 0.01) and in the patients in different groups (HFpEF, HFrEF, non-HF). |
| Yu 2019 [ | AMI | 5923 | 62.2 | 30.5 | P | In-hospital | Mortality | D-dimer tertiles (ng/mL): Low: ≤88; Intermediate: 89–179; High: > 179. | After multivariable adjustment, D-dimer significantly predicted in-hospital mortality (OR 1.060 [95% CI, 1.026–1.094], D-dimer levels significantly improved the prognostic performance of GRACE score (C-statistic: |
| REBUS study 2017 [ | AMI | 412 | 67 | 22.3 | P | 24 | Composite endpoint (all-cause death, MI, congestive HF, or all-cause stroke) | Median D-dimer was 677 μg/L at inclusion | D-dimer was not associated with the composite endpoint (HR 1.22 [95% CI 0.99–1.51], |
| Smid 2011 [ | AMI | 135 | 61 | 26 | P | 12 | CV death, recurrent MI, a second PCI or CABG and ischemic stroke. | On admission D-dimer: 370 (260–718) ng/mL | D-dimer on admission was higher in patients with recurrent thrombotic CV event (medians 550 vs. 365 ng/mL, p = 0.06) OR for D-dimer against endpoints: 2.9 (95%CI 0.9–8.8) |
| THROMBO study 2000 [ | AMI | 1045 | Male 58 Female 62 | 24.3 | P | 26 | Recurrent cardiac events (nonfatal reinfarction or cardiac death) | D-dimer mean in men 508 ± 690 ng/mL vs women 564 ± 430 ng/mL | D-dimer had prognostic value in men (HR 2.35, 95%CI 1.27–4.35], |
| Chen 2018 [ | CAD (76.9% AMI) | 238 | 64.4 | 21.1 | P | 24 | All-cause mortality and CVEs (cardiac death and nonfatal outcomes: recurrent MI, TVR or re-admission due to advanced HF). | Mean D-dimer: 0.7 ± 1.1 mg/L. | OR for long-term CVEs: 1.526 (95% CI, 1.174–1.983), D-dimer in multivariate Cox regression of CVEs: 1.420 (1.069–3.014), |
| Kosaki 2018 [ | ACS (76.3% AMI) | 400 | 71.1 | 27.2 | P | 27 | CVEs (all-cause mortality, recurrent MI, unplanned repeat revascularization, surgical revascularization, fatal arrhythmia, admission for HF, and stroke. | Patients without CVEs: 1.67 mg/mL ±2.49 Patients with CVEs: 2.11 mg/mL ±2.72 | Univariate analysis for D-dimer ≥0.84 mg/mL predicting CVEs: OR 2.49 (95%CI 1.54–4.11), |
| ATLAS ACS-TIMI46 Trial Substudy 2018 [ | ACS (73.9% AMI) | 1834 | Placebo 57.9 Rivaroxaban 57.2 | 23.2 | Post-hoc RCT | 6 | Composite endpoint of CV death, myocardial infarction, or stroke | Baseline D-dimer (μg/mL) Placebo 0.39 (0.24–0.73) vs Rivaroxaban 0.42 (0.24–0.78) | Continuous D-dimer prognostic factor for composite outcome: univariate OR 1.15 (1.03–1.29) |
| Mjelva, 2016 [ | CAD (44.3% AMI) | 871 | 69.5 | 38.7 | P | 84 | All-cause mortality; a combined endpoint consisting of death or recurrent non-fatal MI; recurrent non-fatal MI alone. | 194 (106–437) μg/L Median D-dimer in survivors vs non-survivors were for 153 vs 346 μg/L ( | D-dimer above 436 μg/L independently predicted mortality (4th vs 1st quartile HR 1.83 [95% CI 1.20–2.78], Death or MI (4th vs 1st quartile HR 1.38 [95% CI 0.96–1.98], Recurrent MI (4th vs 1st quartile HR 0.70 [95% CI 0.43–1.15], |
| Gong 2016 [ | CAD (29.2% AMI) | 2209 | 58.58 | 25.9 | P | 18 | Cardiac death, nonfatal MI, recurrence of MI, and stroke | Tertiles (μg/mL) 1: < 0.23, 2: 0.23–0.36, 3: > 0.36, | D-dimer was linked to the severity of CAD (95% CI: 1.20–6.84, p = 0.005) Continuous D-dimer predictor of total outcome (HR = 1.22, 95% CI: 1.09–1.37, |
| Charoensri 2011 [ | ACS (61% AMI) | 74 | 66 | 54.1 | R | In-hospital | CHF, arrhythmias and death | D-dimer levels (μg/L) CHF: 1475 vs No CHF 385; Arrhythmia 5422 vs No arrhythmia 550; Death 5118 vs No death 2550 | D-dimer levels correlated with complication of ACS (CHF; p < 0.001, arrhythmia; |
| Brugger-Andersen 2008 [ | STEMI (15%), NSTEMI (29,3%), UA (9,4%), No ACS (46,3%) | 871 | 69.6 | 39 | P | 24 | All-cause mortality, CVEs (cardiac death or recurrent positive troponin T) | Quartiles of D-dimer (μg/l): Q1 < 106, Q2 ≥ 106–191, Q3 ≥ 191–438, Q4 ≥ 438. | In the univariate analysis highest D-dimer quartile predicted all-cause mortality compared with the lowest quartile (Q1) (OR 7.78 [95%IC, 3.95–15.33], p < 0.001), but not confirmed at multivariable logistic regression analysis (OR 1.80 [95%IC, 0.81 to 3.97]; |
| Prisco 2001 [ | CAD (52,9% AMI) | 54 | 60 (44–75) 65 (38–81) | 11.1 | P | 18 | Restenosis | D-dimer before PCI: AMI (group 1) 55 ng/mL vs elective PCI (group 2) 29.0 ng/mL, | In group 1, D-dimer levels at the end of the procedure were higher in patients with restenosis than in those without ( |
| Oldgren 2001 [ | ACS | 320 | 66 | – | P | 29 | Death, MI, and refractory angina during and after anticoagulant treatment in unstable CAD | < 82 μg/L ( > 149 μg/L ( | No difference in clinical outcome at 72 h, 7 days and 30 days. During long-term follow-up, there was a relation between higher baseline levels of D-dimer and increased mortality ( |
Study design: A ambispective, P prospective, R retrospective
§including recurrent MI, required renal replacement therapy, stent thrombosis, bleeding and length of hospital stay, hospital costs, and mortality and long-term CVEs (mortality, stent restenosis, non-fatal MI and TVR)
ACS acute coronary syndrome, AMI acute myocardial infarction, AUC area under curve, CABG coronary artery bypass grafting, CAD coronary artery disease, CHF congestive heart failure, CI-AKI Contrast-induced acute kidney injury, CV cardiovascular, CVEs cardiovascular events, ESRD end-stage renal disease, HF heart failure, HFpEF heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, HFrEF heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, HR hazard ratio, NSTEMI non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction, NT-proBNP N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide, OR odds ratio, PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, STEMI ST segment elevation myocardial infarction, TIA transient ischemic attack, TIMI Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction, TVR target vessel revascularization, UA unstable angina
Fig. 1Forest plot of the hazard ratio for the risk of composite endpoints according to D-dimer values in patients with acute MI. HR: hazard ratio; CI: confidence interval
Clinical characteristics of studies investigating no-reflow phenomenon included in the systematic review
| Author/ year | N | Age (years) | Women (%) | Study design | Events | D-dimer levels | Odds Ratio | Low CI | High CI | Main findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No-reflow group | Control group | ||||||||||
| Gong 2020 [ | 229 | 63.7 | 17 | R | 28 | 1600 ± 1400 ng/mL | 500 ± 600 ng/mL | 2.520 | 1.160 | 5.470 | D-dimer level can independently predict no-reflow after PCI. D-dimer value of 530 ng/mL was an effective cut-off point for postprocedural no-reflow with 85.7% of sensitivity and 67.7% of specificity (AUC = 0.78; |
| Huang 2020 [ | 1165 | 63.5 | 17 | R | 165 | ≥ 800 ng/mL | < 800 ng/mL | 1.399 | 0.929 | 2.106 | D-dimer group had more frequently no-reflow (13.1% vs. 18.8%. |
| Cheng 2019 [ | 218 | 58.7 | 17.5 | R | 39 | 410.3 ± 237.2 ng/mL | 536.9 ± 291.7 ng/mL | 1.001 | 1.000 | 1.003 | No-reflow patients were older, diabetics, with longer pain-to balloon time, lower blood pressure, higher platelet count and higher levels of D-dimer and Cystatin C. |
| Zhang 2018 [ | 926 | 52.6 | 53.7 | P | 435 | 508.5 ± 254.7 ng/mL | 272.0 ± 218.9 ng/mL | 2.563 | 1.910 | 3.439 | Multivariate OR for predicting no-reflow for D-dimer above mean (383.1 ng/mL). |
| Gao 2018 [ | 822 | 62.5 | 46.1 | P | 418 | 533.0 ± 244.0 ng/mL | 323.4 ± 224.4 ng/mL | 4.212 | 2.973 | 5.967 | Diabetic patients with high D-dimer levels showed higher risk of no-reflow. Sensitivity of high plasma D-dimer levels in predicting no-reflow was 0.766. |
| Sarli 2015 [ | 266 | 64 | 38 | P | 63 | 686 ± 236 μg/l | 418 ± 164 μg/l | 1.005 | 1.003 | 1.007 | D-dimer levels predicted no-reflow (OR: 1.005; 95% CI: 1.003–1.007; |
| Erkol 2014 [ | 569 | 56 | 16 | A | 179 | 720 (280–1490) mg/L | 350 (170–620) mg/L | 1.640 | 1.260 | 2.140 | D-dimer (per each 1 mg/L increase) predictor of angiographic no-reflow ( |
aall STEMI patients. Study design: A ambispective, P prospective, R retrospective. PCI percutaneous coronary intervention. CVEs cardiovascular ev
Fig. 2Pathophysiological mechanisms linking clotting activation and impairment of thrombolysis with the severity of acute coronary syndrome presentation and clinical outcomes
Fig. 3Proposed flow-chart for the management of patients with acute MI according to D-dimer values. MI: myocardial infarction; PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention; UFH: unfractionated Heparin