Viruses (Apr 2021)

D-Dimer Level and Neutrophils Count as Predictive and Prognostic Factors of Pulmonary Embolism in Severe Non-ICU COVID-19 Patients

  • Benjamin Thoreau,
  • Joris Galland,
  • Maxime Delrue,
  • Marie Neuwirth,
  • Alain Stepanian,
  • Anthony Chauvin,
  • Azeddine Dellal,
  • Olivier Nallet,
  • Melanie Roriz,
  • Mathilde Devaux,
  • Jonathan London,
  • Gonzague Martin-Lecamp,
  • Antoine Froissart,
  • Nouara Arab,
  • Bertrand Ferron,
  • Marie-Helene Groff,
  • Viviane Queyrel,
  • Christine Lorut,
  • Lucile Regard,
  • Emilie Berthoux,
  • Guillaume Bayer,
  • Chloe Comarmond,
  • Bertrand Lioger,
  • Arsène Mekinian,
  • Tali-Anne Szwebel,
  • Thomas Sené,
  • Blanca Amador-Borrero,
  • Olivier Mangin,
  • Pierre O. Sellier,
  • Virginie Siguret,
  • Stéphane Mouly,
  • Jean-Philippe Kevorkian,
  • Lariboisière COVID Group,
  • Dominique Vodovar,
  • Damien Sene

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13050758
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 758

Abstract

Read online

The incidence of pulmonary embolism (PE) is high during severe Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). We aimed to identify predictive and prognostic factors of PE in non-ICU hospitalized COVID-19 patients. In the retrospective multicenter observational CLOTVID cohort, we enrolled patients with confirmed RT-PCR COVID-19 who were hospitalized in a medicine ward and also underwent a CT pulmonary angiography for a PE suspicion. Baseline data, laboratory biomarkers, treatments, and outcomes were collected. Predictive and prognostics factors of PE were identified by using logistic multivariate and by Cox regression models, respectively. A total of 174 patients were enrolled, among whom 86 (median [IQR] age of 66 years [55–77]) had post-admission PE suspicion, with 30/86 (34.9%) PE being confirmed. PE occurrence was independently associated with the lack of long-term anticoagulation or thromboprophylaxis (OR [95%CI], 72.3 [3.6–4384.8]) D-dimers ≥ 2000 ng/mL (26.3 [4.1–537.8]) and neutrophils ≥ 7.0 G/L (5.8 [1.4–29.5]). The presence of these two biomarkers was associated with a higher risk of PE (p = 0.0002) and death or ICU transfer (HR [95%CI], 12.9 [2.5–67.8], p < 0.01). In hospitalized non-ICU severe COVID-19 patients with clinical PE suspicion, the lack of anticoagulation, D-dimers ≥ 2000 ng/mL, neutrophils ≥ 7.0 G/L, and these two biomarkers combined might be useful predictive markers of PE and prognosis, respectively.

Keywords