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Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis

Objective To assess the accuracy of the Wells rule for excluding deep vein thrombosis and whether this accuracy applies to different subgroups of patients. Design Meta-analysis of individual patient data. Data sources Authors of 13 studies (n=10 002) provided their datasets, and these individual pat...

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Autores principales: Geersing, G J, Zuithoff, N P A, Kearon, C, Anderson, D R, ten Cate-Hoek, A J, Elf, J L, Bates, S M, Hoes, A W, Kraaijenhagen, R A, Oudega, R, Schutgens, R E G, Stevens, S M, Woller, S C, Wells, P S, Moons, K G M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3948465/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24615063
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.g1340
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author Geersing, G J
Zuithoff, N P A
Kearon, C
Anderson, D R
ten Cate-Hoek, A J
Elf, J L
Bates, S M
Hoes, A W
Kraaijenhagen, R A
Oudega, R
Schutgens, R E G
Stevens, S M
Woller, S C
Wells, P S
Moons, K G M
author_facet Geersing, G J
Zuithoff, N P A
Kearon, C
Anderson, D R
ten Cate-Hoek, A J
Elf, J L
Bates, S M
Hoes, A W
Kraaijenhagen, R A
Oudega, R
Schutgens, R E G
Stevens, S M
Woller, S C
Wells, P S
Moons, K G M
author_sort Geersing, G J
collection PubMed
description Objective To assess the accuracy of the Wells rule for excluding deep vein thrombosis and whether this accuracy applies to different subgroups of patients. Design Meta-analysis of individual patient data. Data sources Authors of 13 studies (n=10 002) provided their datasets, and these individual patient data were merged into one dataset. Eligibility criteria Studies were eligible if they enrolled consecutive outpatients with suspected deep vein thrombosis, scored all variables of the Wells rule, and performed an appropriate reference standard. Main outcome measures Multilevel logistic regression models, including an interaction term for each subgroup, were used to estimate differences in predicted probabilities of deep vein thrombosis by the Wells rule. In addition, D-dimer testing was added to assess differences in the ability to exclude deep vein thrombosis using an unlikely score on the Wells rule combined with a negative D-dimer test result. Results Overall, increasing scores on the Wells rule were associated with an increasing probability of having deep vein thrombosis. Estimated probabilities were almost twofold higher in patients with cancer, in patients with suspected recurrent events, and (to a lesser extent) in males. An unlikely score on the Wells rule (≤1) combined with a negative D-dimer test result was associated with an extremely low probability of deep vein thrombosis (1.2%, 95% confidence interval 0.7% to 1.8%). This combination occurred in 29% (95% confidence interval 20% to 40%) of patients. These findings were consistent in subgroups defined by type of D-dimer assay (quantitative or qualitative), sex, and care setting (primary or hospital care). For patients with cancer, the combination of an unlikely score on the Wells rule and a negative D-dimer test result occurred in only 9% of patients and was associated with a 2.2% probability of deep vein thrombosis being present. In patients with suspected recurrent events, only the modified Wells rule (adding one point for the previous event) is safe. Conclusion Combined with a negative D-dimer test result (both quantitative and qualitative), deep vein thrombosis can be excluded in patients with an unlikely score on the Wells rule. This finding is true for both sexes, as well as for patients presenting in primary and hospital care. In patients with cancer, the combination is neither safe nor efficient. For patients with suspected recurrent disease, one extra point should be added to the rule to enable a safe exclusion.
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spelling pubmed-39484652014-03-14 Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis Geersing, G J Zuithoff, N P A Kearon, C Anderson, D R ten Cate-Hoek, A J Elf, J L Bates, S M Hoes, A W Kraaijenhagen, R A Oudega, R Schutgens, R E G Stevens, S M Woller, S C Wells, P S Moons, K G M BMJ Research Objective To assess the accuracy of the Wells rule for excluding deep vein thrombosis and whether this accuracy applies to different subgroups of patients. Design Meta-analysis of individual patient data. Data sources Authors of 13 studies (n=10 002) provided their datasets, and these individual patient data were merged into one dataset. Eligibility criteria Studies were eligible if they enrolled consecutive outpatients with suspected deep vein thrombosis, scored all variables of the Wells rule, and performed an appropriate reference standard. Main outcome measures Multilevel logistic regression models, including an interaction term for each subgroup, were used to estimate differences in predicted probabilities of deep vein thrombosis by the Wells rule. In addition, D-dimer testing was added to assess differences in the ability to exclude deep vein thrombosis using an unlikely score on the Wells rule combined with a negative D-dimer test result. Results Overall, increasing scores on the Wells rule were associated with an increasing probability of having deep vein thrombosis. Estimated probabilities were almost twofold higher in patients with cancer, in patients with suspected recurrent events, and (to a lesser extent) in males. An unlikely score on the Wells rule (≤1) combined with a negative D-dimer test result was associated with an extremely low probability of deep vein thrombosis (1.2%, 95% confidence interval 0.7% to 1.8%). This combination occurred in 29% (95% confidence interval 20% to 40%) of patients. These findings were consistent in subgroups defined by type of D-dimer assay (quantitative or qualitative), sex, and care setting (primary or hospital care). For patients with cancer, the combination of an unlikely score on the Wells rule and a negative D-dimer test result occurred in only 9% of patients and was associated with a 2.2% probability of deep vein thrombosis being present. In patients with suspected recurrent events, only the modified Wells rule (adding one point for the previous event) is safe. Conclusion Combined with a negative D-dimer test result (both quantitative and qualitative), deep vein thrombosis can be excluded in patients with an unlikely score on the Wells rule. This finding is true for both sexes, as well as for patients presenting in primary and hospital care. In patients with cancer, the combination is neither safe nor efficient. For patients with suspected recurrent disease, one extra point should be added to the rule to enable a safe exclusion. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2014-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3948465/ /pubmed/24615063 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.g1340 Text en © Geersing et al 2014 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Geersing, G J
Zuithoff, N P A
Kearon, C
Anderson, D R
ten Cate-Hoek, A J
Elf, J L
Bates, S M
Hoes, A W
Kraaijenhagen, R A
Oudega, R
Schutgens, R E G
Stevens, S M
Woller, S C
Wells, P S
Moons, K G M
Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis
title Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis
title_full Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis
title_fullStr Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis
title_full_unstemmed Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis
title_short Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the Wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis
title_sort exclusion of deep vein thrombosis using the wells rule in clinically important subgroups: individual patient data meta-analysis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3948465/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24615063
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.g1340
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