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D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis

Objective: Examine the possible beneficial effects of early, D-dimer driven anticoagulation in preventing thrombotic complications and improving the overall outcomes of COVID-19 intubated patients. Methods: To address COVID-19 hypercoagulability, we developed a clinical protocol to escalate anticoag...

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Autores principales: Tassiopoulos, Apostolos K., Mofakham, Sima, Rubano, Jerry A., Labropoulos, Nicos, Bannazadeh, Mohsen, Drakos, Panagiotis, Volteas, Panagiotis, Cleri, Nathaniel A., Alkadaa, Leor N., Asencio, Anthony A., Oganov, Anthony, Hou, Wei, Rutigliano, Daniel N., Singer, Adam J., Vosswinkel, James, Talamini, Mark, Mikell, Charles B., Kaushansky, Kenneth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7902033/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33634153
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.631335
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author Tassiopoulos, Apostolos K.
Mofakham, Sima
Rubano, Jerry A.
Labropoulos, Nicos
Bannazadeh, Mohsen
Drakos, Panagiotis
Volteas, Panagiotis
Cleri, Nathaniel A.
Alkadaa, Leor N.
Asencio, Anthony A.
Oganov, Anthony
Hou, Wei
Rutigliano, Daniel N.
Singer, Adam J.
Vosswinkel, James
Talamini, Mark
Mikell, Charles B.
Kaushansky, Kenneth
author_facet Tassiopoulos, Apostolos K.
Mofakham, Sima
Rubano, Jerry A.
Labropoulos, Nicos
Bannazadeh, Mohsen
Drakos, Panagiotis
Volteas, Panagiotis
Cleri, Nathaniel A.
Alkadaa, Leor N.
Asencio, Anthony A.
Oganov, Anthony
Hou, Wei
Rutigliano, Daniel N.
Singer, Adam J.
Vosswinkel, James
Talamini, Mark
Mikell, Charles B.
Kaushansky, Kenneth
author_sort Tassiopoulos, Apostolos K.
collection PubMed
description Objective: Examine the possible beneficial effects of early, D-dimer driven anticoagulation in preventing thrombotic complications and improving the overall outcomes of COVID-19 intubated patients. Methods: To address COVID-19 hypercoagulability, we developed a clinical protocol to escalate anticoagulation based on serum D-dimer levels. We retrospectively reviewed all our first 240 intubated patients with COVID-19. Of the 240, 195 were stratified into patients treated based on this protocol (ON-protocol, n = 91) and the control group, patients who received standard thromboprophylaxis (OFF-protocol, n = 104). All patients were admitted to the Stony Brook University Hospital intensive care units (ICUs) between February 7th, 2020 and May 17, 2020 and were otherwise treated in the same manner for all aspects of COVID-19 disease. Results: We found that the overall mortality was significantly lower ON-protocol compared to OFF-protocol (27.47 vs. 58.66%, P < 0.001). Average maximum D-dimer levels were significantly lower in the ON-protocol group (7,553 vs. 12,343 ng/mL), as was serum creatinine (2.2 vs. 2.8 mg/dL). Patients with poorly controlled D-dimer levels had higher rates of kidney dysfunction and mortality. Transfusion requirements and serious bleeding events were similar between groups. To address any possible between-group differences, we performed a propensity-matched analysis of 124 of the subjects (62 matched pairs, ON-protocol and OFF-protocol), which showed similar findings (31 vs. 57% overall mortality in the ON-protocol and OFF-protocol group, respectively). Conclusions: D-dimer-driven anticoagulation appears to be safe in patients with COVID-19 infection and is associated with improved survival. What This Paper Adds: It has been shown that hypercoagulability in patients with severe COVID-19 infection leads to thromboembolic complications and organ dysfunction. Anticoagulation has been variably administered to these patients, but it is unknown whether routine or escalated thromboprophylaxis provides a survival benefit. Our data shows that escalated D-dimer driven anticoagulation is associated with improved organ function and overall survival in intubated COVID-19 ICU patients at our institution. Importantly, we found that timely escalation of this anticoagulation is critical in preventing organ dysfunction and mortality in patients with severe COVID-19 infection.
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spelling pubmed-79020332021-02-24 D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis Tassiopoulos, Apostolos K. Mofakham, Sima Rubano, Jerry A. Labropoulos, Nicos Bannazadeh, Mohsen Drakos, Panagiotis Volteas, Panagiotis Cleri, Nathaniel A. Alkadaa, Leor N. Asencio, Anthony A. Oganov, Anthony Hou, Wei Rutigliano, Daniel N. Singer, Adam J. Vosswinkel, James Talamini, Mark Mikell, Charles B. Kaushansky, Kenneth Front Med (Lausanne) Medicine Objective: Examine the possible beneficial effects of early, D-dimer driven anticoagulation in preventing thrombotic complications and improving the overall outcomes of COVID-19 intubated patients. Methods: To address COVID-19 hypercoagulability, we developed a clinical protocol to escalate anticoagulation based on serum D-dimer levels. We retrospectively reviewed all our first 240 intubated patients with COVID-19. Of the 240, 195 were stratified into patients treated based on this protocol (ON-protocol, n = 91) and the control group, patients who received standard thromboprophylaxis (OFF-protocol, n = 104). All patients were admitted to the Stony Brook University Hospital intensive care units (ICUs) between February 7th, 2020 and May 17, 2020 and were otherwise treated in the same manner for all aspects of COVID-19 disease. Results: We found that the overall mortality was significantly lower ON-protocol compared to OFF-protocol (27.47 vs. 58.66%, P < 0.001). Average maximum D-dimer levels were significantly lower in the ON-protocol group (7,553 vs. 12,343 ng/mL), as was serum creatinine (2.2 vs. 2.8 mg/dL). Patients with poorly controlled D-dimer levels had higher rates of kidney dysfunction and mortality. Transfusion requirements and serious bleeding events were similar between groups. To address any possible between-group differences, we performed a propensity-matched analysis of 124 of the subjects (62 matched pairs, ON-protocol and OFF-protocol), which showed similar findings (31 vs. 57% overall mortality in the ON-protocol and OFF-protocol group, respectively). Conclusions: D-dimer-driven anticoagulation appears to be safe in patients with COVID-19 infection and is associated with improved survival. What This Paper Adds: It has been shown that hypercoagulability in patients with severe COVID-19 infection leads to thromboembolic complications and organ dysfunction. Anticoagulation has been variably administered to these patients, but it is unknown whether routine or escalated thromboprophylaxis provides a survival benefit. Our data shows that escalated D-dimer driven anticoagulation is associated with improved organ function and overall survival in intubated COVID-19 ICU patients at our institution. Importantly, we found that timely escalation of this anticoagulation is critical in preventing organ dysfunction and mortality in patients with severe COVID-19 infection. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7902033/ /pubmed/33634153 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.631335 Text en Copyright © 2021 Tassiopoulos, Mofakham, Rubano, Labropoulos, Bannazadeh, Drakos, Volteas, Cleri, Alkadaa, Asencio, Oganov, Hou, Rutigliano, Singer, Vosswinkel, Talamini, Mikell and Kaushansky. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Medicine
Tassiopoulos, Apostolos K.
Mofakham, Sima
Rubano, Jerry A.
Labropoulos, Nicos
Bannazadeh, Mohsen
Drakos, Panagiotis
Volteas, Panagiotis
Cleri, Nathaniel A.
Alkadaa, Leor N.
Asencio, Anthony A.
Oganov, Anthony
Hou, Wei
Rutigliano, Daniel N.
Singer, Adam J.
Vosswinkel, James
Talamini, Mark
Mikell, Charles B.
Kaushansky, Kenneth
D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis
title D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis
title_full D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis
title_fullStr D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis
title_full_unstemmed D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis
title_short D-Dimer-Driven Anticoagulation Reduces Mortality in Intubated COVID-19 Patients: A Cohort Study With a Propensity-Matched Analysis
title_sort d-dimer-driven anticoagulation reduces mortality in intubated covid-19 patients: a cohort study with a propensity-matched analysis
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7902033/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33634153
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.631335
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