Evaluation of haemostatic molecular markers for diagnosis of disseminated intravascular coagulation in patients with infections

Early treatment of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is recommended but global coagulation tests used in authorized DIC criteria are not sensitive for diagnosis of early-phase DIC. We examined the plasma levels of thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), plasmin-plasmin inhibitor complex (PPI...

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Published in:Thrombosis and haemostasis Vol. 95; no. 2; p. 282
Main Authors: Asakura, Hidesaku, Wada, Hideo, Okamoto, Kohji, Iba, Toshiaki, Uchiyama, Toshimasa, Eguchi, Yutaka, Kawasugi, Kazuo, Koga, Shin, Mayumi, Toshihiko, Koike, Kaoru, Gando, Satoshi
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Germany 01-02-2006
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Summary:Early treatment of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is recommended but global coagulation tests used in authorized DIC criteria are not sensitive for diagnosis of early-phase DIC. We examined the plasma levels of thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), plasmin-plasmin inhibitor complex (PPIC) and D-dimer in patients with suspected DIC to determine the cutoff values for diagnosis of DIC. Plasma levels of D-dimer, TAT and PPIC were significantly elevated in patients with DIC and correlated with DIC score. The cutoff values were determined using the receiver operative curve analysis. The cutoff value represented the point at which the sensitivity curve crossed the specificity curve. The cutoff values of D-dimer, TAT and PPIC for DIC were 12.0 mug/ml, 11.0 ng/ml and 1.8 mug/ml, respectively. These values were moderately to highly sensitive for the diagnosis of DIC but not for poor outcome. The combination of D-dimer, TAT and PPIC showed high sensitivity and low specificity when one or more tests were positive, but showed low sensitivity and high specificity when all three tests were positive. We conclude that hemostatic molecular markers might be useful for the diagnosis of DIC and should be confirmed by several trials.
ISSN:0340-6245
DOI:10.1160/TH05-04-0286