In my practice, I have been keeping track of numerous parameters to try my best to decide when to pull the trigger of when to start anticoagulation. It's a big mystery. As the authors of this paper mentioned, we don't know what is the prevalence of venous thromboembolism in patients with severe COVID-19 infections. They looked at checking d-dimers to predict VTE in these patients.
Retrospective study published on 4/9. They looked at 81 ICU patients in Wuhan, China. They did lower extremity ultrasounds. I am personally reporting that I’ve seen upper extremity VTE's so these could have been missed in the study. They also performed numerous other lab tests.
What they found
25% of patients (n=20) had lower extremity VTE. Again, they didn’t check the uppers.
8 of these 20 patients died.
VTE group: older patients, lower lymphocyte counts, longer PTT (all statistically significant)
What lab value did they find to be most helpful?
D-dimer greater than 1.5mcg/mL.
85% Sensitivity. 88.5% Specificity. 94.7% Negative predictive value.
For some background, an elevated d-dimer is a sign of "excess coagulation activation and hyperfibrinolysis". Once you start anticoagulation, the d-dimer should start coming down. I am seeing this in my practice. I haven't decided where to pull the trigger, though. Anecdotal evidence. Poo poo evidence.
Cui, S., Chen, S., Li, X., Liu, S. and Wang, F. (2020), Prevalence of venous thromboembolism in patients with severe novel coronavirus pneumonia. J Thromb Haemost. Accepted Author Manuscript. doi:10.1111/jth.14830
- EJ
Link to Website with Article
Link to Article

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