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Clinical Chemistry 49: 1846-1853, 2003; 10.1373/clinchem.2003.022277
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(Clinical Chemistry. 2003;49:1846-1853.)
© 2003 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.


Evidence-based Laboratory Medicine and Test Utilization

Turbidimetric D-Dimer Test in the Diagnosis of Pulmonary Embolism: A Metaanalysis

Michael D. Brown1,a, Joseph Lau2, R. Darrell Nelson3 and Jeffery A. Kline3

1 Grand Rapids MERC/Michigan State University Program in Emergency Medicine, Grand Rapids, MI 49503.

2 Division of Clinical Care Research, Tufts-New England Medical Center, Boston, MA 02111.

3 Department of Emergency Medicine, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC 28232.

aAddress correspondence to this author at: Spectrum Health-Butterworth, Emergency Medicine, 100 Michigan Ave., NE, Grand Rapids, MI 49503. Fax 616-391-3674; E-mail brownm{at}msu.edu.


   Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
Background: Clinicians in outpatient clinics and emergency departments desire an accurate quantitative D-dimer assay. The study objective was to evaluate the diagnostic performance characteristics of the latex turbidimetric D-dimer test in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) in the emergency department population.

Methods: We conducted a search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, and bibliographies of previous systematic reviews with no language restriction. Experts in the field of PE research were contacted to identify unpublished studies. Prospective investigations involving predominately outpatient populations with suspected PE that used a turbidimetric D-dimer test were included. Two authors extracted data independently and assessed study quality based on the composition of the patient spectrum and the reference standard used. Consensus was reached by conference. The analysis was based on a summary ROC curve and combining sensitivity and specificity independently across studies using a random-effects model.

Results: The search yielded 264 publications and 2 unpublished studies. Nine studies met the inclusion criteria and provided a sample of 1901 individuals. Eight of the nine studies were homogeneous in terms of both sensitivity and specificity. One study had similar sensitivity but higher specificity. Combining the studies yielded an overall sensitivity of 0.93 (95% confidence interval, 0.89–0.96) and an overall specificity of 0.51 (95% confidence interval, 0.42–0.59).

Conclusions: The turbidimetric D-dimer test is sensitive but nonspecific for the detection of PE in the emergency department setting. D-Dimer tests using latex turbidimetric methods appear to have test characteristics comparable to those for ELISA methods.


   Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
D-Dimer testing in the emergency department (ED)1 setting has been recommended as a strategy for screening patients with a low pretest probability for pulmonary embolism (PE) (1). The rapid qualitative latex tests and bedside assays have not been demonstrated to have sensitivity adequate to rule out a life-threatening condition such as PE (2)(3). However, quantitative D-dimer methods have recently become available and may have test characteristics similar to those of the D-dimer ELISA (1). A previous systematic review evaluated the accuracy of the D-dimer ELISA in the diagnosis of PE and found that the test has excellent sensitivity but only moderate specificity (4). Using the same methods, this metaanalysis evaluates the test characteristics of quantitative latex turbidimetric D-dimer tests in the diagnosis of PE in outpatient acute-care settings.


   Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
research question
The research question was: What is the accuracy (e.g., sensitivity, specificity, likelihood ratios) of the D-dimer test using latex turbidimetric methods in the diagnosis of PE in the adult patient presenting to the ED with a suspected PE?

search techniques
MEDLINE (January 1982 to November 2002) was searched for clinical studies assessing the utility of a turbidimetric latex D-dimer test in the diagnosis of PE. The electronic search used the following terms or MeSH subject headings: (pulmonary embolism OR venous thrombosis OR PE OR VTE), AND (D-dimer OR fibrin OR fibrinogen-degradation OR FDP OR fibrinogen-degradation-products) AND Sensitivity and Specificity. Two authors independently reviewed each abstract in detail to determine the eligibility of each reference to potentially meet the inclusion criteria with the level of agreement reported (5).

The authors searched EMBASE and searched the database from Reference Update® licensed from the Institute for Scientific Information® from 1995 to 2002 to identify any additional eligible studies that were not identified in the MEDLINE search. The search strategy used for the Reference Update query included "D-dimer" AND "Pulmonary Embolism OR Thromboembolism OR Venous Thromboembolism". The reference list of the articles chosen for inclusion in the metaanalysis and the reference list of previous systematic reviews were screened to identify further studies for inclusion (4)(6)(7)(8).

Experts in the area of PE diagnosis and all companies that manufacture or market the turbidimetric D-dimer test cleared for human use by the US Food and Drug Administration were contacted either by telephone or e-mail in an attempt to identify any unpublished work that would qualify for inclusion.

study selection
Two reviewers (M.D.B., J.A.K.) independently examined the titles and abstracts of the references identified in the initial MEDLINE search to determine whether the study was relevant to the clinical question (relevance search) (5). Reviews and editorials were excluded. Studies that did not address humans and studies that did not examine any cases of PE were also excluded.

inclusion criteria
To be included in the metaanalysis, the study must have been an investigation involving a predominately outpatient population presenting with symptoms and signs suspicious for PE. If a study included any inpatients, the study population must have been composed of at least 80% outpatients or data must have been available to calculate sensitivity and specificity for the outpatient component of the study population.

final inclusion
Following the relevance search, two reviewers (M.D.B., J.A.K.) compared exclusion logs to determine whether there was any discordance. Where there was disagreement, consensus was reached by conference. A data collection form was used to abstract data from each study meeting the inclusion criteria (a copy of the data collection form is available as a Data Supplement accompanying the online version of this article athttp://www.clinchem.org/content/vol49/issue11/). If a study met the inclusion criteria, reviewers attempted to contact the author to identify additional papers, confirm data extraction/estimation for correctness and completeness, and obtain missing data. Two reviewers (M.D.B., J.A.K.) independently confirmed numeric calculations and graphic extrapolations.

reference standards
Although a positive angiogram or autopsy is considered the reference standard for the diagnosis of PE, we considered any one of the following as acceptable surrogate reference standards: (a) high probability ventilation-perfusion scan, (b) computed tomography scan positive for PE, or (c) positive lower extremity imaging study (ultrasound, impedance plethysmography, venogram, or computed tomography venogram). A negative angiogram was considered the reference standard for ruling out PE. Acceptable surrogate reference standards for a negative diagnosis were as follows: (a) normal or very low probability ventilation-perfusion scan, or (b) clinical follow-up documenting the absence of a thromboembolic event over a minimum of 3 months (9).

quality assessment
The rigorous inclusion criteria served as the primary quality filter. The metaanalysis focused the appraisal of study quality on the potential for differential reference standard bias (10) and spectrum bias (11). The reference standard and patient spectrum for each study was graded in regard to quality parameters (A, excellent; B, susceptible to some bias; C, indeterminate or poor) (4) as outlined below:

Reference standard.
Grade A included those studies using the same reference standard regardless of the turbidimetric D-dimer result. Grade B included those studies using different reference standards depending on the results of the turbidimetric D-dimer test. Grade C included those studies indeterminate or not meeting the study protocol definition of an appropriate reference standard.

Patient spectrum.
For grade A, the patient spectrum would be expected to include a consecutive or random sampling of a typical outpatient population presenting with symptoms and signs suspicious for PE. Grade B included studies that selected only a small subgroup of individuals with suspected PE. Grade C included studies that were indeterminate or not meeting the study protocol definition of an appropriate patient spectrum.

There is potential for interpretation bias if the radiologist performing the reference standard was not blind to the turbidimetric D-dimer result (11). This information was obtained from the manuscript or by author query. To provide the most conservative estimate of test characteristics, after each study was scored for quality, grade C studies were excluded from the analysis.

statistical analyses
The analysis was based on a summary ROC (SROC) curve (12)(13). The sensitivity and specificity for the single test threshold identified for each study were used to plot an unweighted SROC curve (13)(14). A correction factor of one-half was added to each cell to avoid calculation problems by having a value of zero in the 2 x 2 table (13). This correction has not been found to significantly alter the results of the SROC curve (13). The SROC curve analysis was based on a regression analysis of logit transformation of the data, which plots the difference between the logit of the true-positive (TPR) and the logit of the false-positive (FPR) rates (D = logit TPR - logit FPR) on the y axis and the sum (S = logit TPR + logit FPR) on the x axis. The y axis (D) is equivalent to the log diagnostic odds ratio, and the x axis (S) is a measure of how the test characteristics vary with the test threshold. A regression equation (D = {alpha} + ß * S) derived from the SROC curve analysis can be used to assess the heterogeneity among study results. If the ß coefficient is near zero and not statistically significant, then evidence of significant heterogeneity is not present. When there is little variability of both the test sensitivity and specificity among studies, the SROC curve does not provide additional information over averaged sensitivity or specificity values (14). A random-effects model was used to calculate the average sensitivity and specificity across studies (14)(15)(16). The random-effects model accounts for between-study variability and provides a more conservative estimation compared with the fixed-effects model (12). Spurious SROC curves may result when individual study results are homogeneous because regression analysis on data with small variations in both the independent and dependent variables could be misleading. In this case, an overall diagnostic odds ratio may be calculated by combining the diagnostic odds ratios of individual studies, using a random-effects model to construct the SROC curve (17). This method assumes that the ß is zero and produces a symmetric SROC curve. Statistical tests related to the SROC curve were performed using MetaTest (Ver. 0.6, Boston, MA) and MathCAD (Ver. 2001i Professional; © 1986–2001 MathSoft Engineering & Education, Inc.). All other statistical tests were performed using the SAS statistical application program (Ver. 8.0; Cary, NC).


   Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
search
The comprehensive search yielded a total of 266 studies. A total of 258 references were identified in the initial search of MEDLINE. After review of the abstracts, 220 were immediately deemed ineligible for full review (Table 1 ). The relevance search had moderate agreement between the two reviewers, with a simple agreement of 89% and {kappa} of 0.54 [95% confidence interval (95% CI), 0.39–0.69]. The EMBASE and Institute for Scientific Information search yielded an additional five references eligible for full review (Fig. 1 ). The search for the "gray literature" (18) identified one article that was missed (19) and two unpublished studies. Both of the unpublished studies were of substantial size and appeared to qualify for full review. One of the unpublished studies was the product of research done by one of the authors (J.A.K.) of this metaanalysis. The second unpublished study was done at the University of Virginia, and a draft of the manuscript has been submitted for publication (Dr. David E. Bruns, personal communication).2 Representatives of six manufacturers responded to inquiries regarding unpublished data. The companies contacted included Kamiya Biomedical Company, BioPool International Inc (acquired by Trinity USA), Roche Diagnostics, Dade Behring, Stago Diagnostica, and Instrumentation Laboratories. None of these sources provided any undisclosed literature. One company, bioMerieux Inc, parent company of Organon Teknika Corp, the manufacturer of the MDA® assay, indicated the need for a Confidentiality Agreement before unpublished data would be released. We declined this option.


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Table 1. Primary reasons for exclusion (n = 257).



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Figure 1. Search, inclusion, and exclusion flow diagram.

The "gray literature" was defined as those studies that were unpublished or with limited distribution (18).

inclusion
A complete manuscript review was performed on the remaining 46 articles. One French and one Russian manuscript required translation. After full review, 34 studies were excluded for various reasons (Table 1Up ). To clarify important missing information and confirm data extraction, an attempt was made to contact the authors of the 12 remaining studies. Authors of 8 of the 12 studies (67%) responded in some form to these queries. After attempts at author contact, an additional three studies were excluded (Table 1Up ). Nine studies therefore met the inclusion criteria and provided a total study population of 1901 individuals (20)(21)(22)(23)(24)(25)(26). A summary of the major characteristics of each study is provided in Table 2 .


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Table 2. Nine studies of turbidimetric D-dimer in the diagnosis of PE: study characteristics and diagnostic test performance.

study descriptions
The prevalence of disease among outpatients suspected of PE ranged from 9% to 62% with a mean of 26%. In all studies where information on gender was available, females were represented slightly more than males. The mean age of the patients ranged from 55 to 66 years. Seven studies used a D-dimer concentration <500 µg/L as normal, one used <200 µg/L (21), and one used 190 µg/L, a value determined by the authors on post hoc analysis (22).

quality assessment
Seven studies were assigned grade A with respect to the key quality parameters, patient spectrum, and reference standard (Table 2Up ) (20)(21)(22)(24)(25)(26). Two of these studies included 20% inpatients, which was the maximum percentage of inpatients a study could have and still meet the inclusion criteria as defined in the research protocol (24)(26). None of the studies used the results of the turbidimetric test to determine which reference standard was applied and were, therefore, not suspected of differential reference standard bias. Two studies were rated grade B with respect to the patient spectrum (23). The radiologist was blind to the D-dimer results and any other clinical information in the majority (seven of nine) of studies.

analyses
After the addition of the correction factor (adding 0.5 to each cell), the sensitivity and specificity of each included study were calculated with the 95% CI displayed (Fig. 2 and Table 2Up ). The pooled summary estimate using a random-effects model produced a sensitivity of 0.93 (95% CI, 0.89–0.96), and a specificity of 0.51 (95% CI, 0.42–0.59). The SROC curve analysis demonstrated evidence of statistically significant heterogeneity with ß = 0.51 (95% CI, 0.01–1.02). However, the visual display provided by the SROC curve showed minimal variability in the results (Fig. 3 ). Deriving the SROC curve using the overall diagnostic odds ratio of 13.9 (95% CI, 8.3–23.4) provided a symmetric curve that covered a larger area.



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Figure 2. Sensitivity (left) and specificity (right) plots for turbidimetric D-dimer tests in the diagnosis of PE.

The reference number for each study is listed between the plots. * denotes an unpublished study. The 95% CIs are displayed as horizontal lines. The filled circle at the bottom of each plot is the pooled sensitivity or specificity using a random-effects model.



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Figure 3. SROC curve analysis of turbidimetric D-dimer tests in the diagnosis of PE.

Individual studies are depicted as ellipses. The x and y dimensions of the ellipses are proportional to the square root of the number of available patients to study the sensitivity and specificity, respectively, within the analysis. The symmetric SROC curve (thick line) was created using the overall diagnostic odds ratio of all the studies. The overall diagnostic odds ratio was calculated by combining each study’s diagnostic odds ratio, using a random-effects model. The asymmetric SROC curve was created using the (unweighted) method as described by Moses et al. (13) (see text for explanation). The x represents the random-effects estimate of the test sensitivity and specificity by combining these values independently. The x and y dimensions of the shaded box represent the 95% CI of the overall specificity and sensitivity, respectively.

sensitivity analyses
The sensitivity analysis based on the key quality parameters and subgroups defined a priori was performed, and none were significant. All studies formed a cluster except for the study by Kovacs et al. (21), which was the only truly heterogeneous study in the group. When the unpublished studies were excluded, there was essentially no change in the overall estimates.


   Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 
This systematic review attempted to identify the current published and unpublished literature regarding the use of turbidimetric D-dimer in the diagnosis of PE in the acute-care setting. After an exhaustive search, the application of stringent inclusion/exclusion criteria, and rigorous selection methodology, we included nine studies involving 1901 patients. The results demonstrate that D-dimer tests using the turbidimetric technique are highly sensitive (93%), but only moderately specific (51%). This equates to a likelihood ratio positive of 1.9 and a likelihood ratio negative of 0.14. Previous work focused on use of the rapid ELISA (4), and our data show approximate equivalence to the D-dimer ELISA. It is important to have quantitative data as background data to devise clinical decision rules and clinical pathways. Clinical relevance includes that the turbidimetric test can be expected to offer a likelihood ratio negative of ~0.1 to 0.15. Thus, the turbidimetric test could be used to reduce the posttest probability of PE to <1%, as suggested by Kline and Wells, if used in a patient population with a pretest probability <10% (1). This level of pretest probability may be achieved with the use of appropriate clinical decision rules or possibly with the use of clinician suspicion of low-risk for PE.

In recent studies of ED outpatients who were evaluated for possible pulmonary embolism with D-dimer testing, the pretest prevalence of PE was <10% even without the use of a decision rule or physician suspicion to select for low-risk individuals (27)(28). Indeed, over the past 5 years, published studies of outpatients evaluated for PE with the D-dimer have demonstrated a steady reduction in the overall prevalence of PE, which suggests that physicians are becoming more comfortable with the D-dimer and are expanding its use in patients who might not be evaluated with an objective test if the only option for testing were the use of pulmonary vascular imaging. We used strict criteria to select studies involving predominantly outpatients. The mean prevalence of PE in the present study was 26%, which we believe is somewhat higher than will be encountered when the test is implemented in daily practice. Thus, it can be speculated that because of spectrum bias, the diagnostic indexes derived in this metaanalysis will be slightly different from those that will be observed in real practice. One possibility is that the specificity of the test will increase and the sensitivity will decrease.

In a recent survey of 30 academic medical centers, 87% of academic emergency physicians indicated that they had 24-h access to the D-dimer assay for the purpose of evaluating for PE (29). We postulate that the number of clinicians who are ordering the quantitative D-dimer and using the result to make decisions in the ED is increasing each year. Moreover, our experience suggests that many laboratory directors are currently in the process of reevaluating the D-dimer assays that they use in their hospital laboratories. For these reasons, we thought that it was important to aggregate the available data in this systematic review to help clinicians and laboratory directors decide which D-dimer assay format to use. Clinicians are generally aware that the ELISA format provides quantitative D-dimer results and that a negative D-dimer ELISA result (<500 µg/L) significantly lowers the probability of PE. However, our experience indicates that clinicians are less well informed of the diagnostic accuracy of the quantitative latex immunoturbidimetric D-dimer assay. Some have confused the immunoturbidimetric D-dimer with the latex fixation assay. The immunoturbidimetric test assay uses spectrophotometry to measure the rate of precipitation of latex particles that are coated with antibody directed against the D-dimer peptide. When a plasma sample is introduced to a sample cuvette containing the latex particles, the particles begin to aggregate. As the particles aggregate, the amount of light transmitted across the cuvette increases at a rate that is proportional to the D-dimer concentration in the plasma sample. In contrast, the qualitative latex fixation D-dimer assay relies on visual inspection to detect flocculation of latex particles. The interpretation of latex fixation assays is therefore intrinsically subjective. This subjective component may be one reason that the qualitative latex fixation D-dimer assay has not uniformly demonstrated good sensitivity for PE in published studies.

A precedent metaanalysis that used methods similar to those in the present report found that the D-dimer ELISA had a pooled sensitivity of 94% and specificity of 45% in outpatients with suspected PE (4). The ELISA metaanalysis pooled the data from 2126 patients in 11 studies, but included only 2 studies (n = 639) (30)(31) that used the rapid ELISA method. The standard ELISA method has limited value in the outpatient setting, inasmuch as the test requires at least 3 h to perform and is generally not designed for single-sample use. Manufacturers indicate that commercially available rapid ELISA tests can be performed within 30 min (VIDAS®). Likewise, the immunoturbidimetric D-dimer test can be completed within 15 min (MDA). We found very similar diagnostic performance of the immunoturbidimetric assay compared with the standard ELISA assay.

In this study, we used the cutoff for a normal D-dimer concentration that was suggested by the authors. Seven of nine studies in Table 2Up used 500 µg/L as the upper limit of normal. Among the seven studies that used 500 µg/L, the prevalence of PE ranged from 9% to 62%, but the cluster of summary diagnostic indexes from these seven studies was very tight when plotted on the SROC in Fig. 3Up . This finding suggests that a threshold of 500 µg/L will yield very similar diagnostic results when applied to different outpatient populations.

Two studies that used lower cutoffs warrant specific comment. One study that used 190 µg/L (22) performed similarly to studies that used 500 µg/L (Table 2Up ). However, it was somewhat counterintuitive that the specificity in the study that used a threshold of 200 µg/L (21) was unusually high (74%) compared with studies that used 500 µg/L. One possible reason for this finding was that patients in that particular study population, for whom the prevalence of PE was 10%, may have been relatively young and devoid of comorbidity that would cause false-positive D-dimer test results. Thus, if the hypothesis that expanding use of the D-dimer to screen for PE leads to testing in younger patients with less comorbidity is true, then it remains possible that a lower concentration threshold can be used without sacrificing test specificity. This discussion must be interpreted with caution, and we emphasize that we do not have data for all D-dimer concentrations from all 1901 patients, which precludes us from recommending an optimal cutoff for a normal D-dimer concentration.

In conclusion, this metaanalysis found that the immunoturbidimetric D-dimer assay has reasonably high sensitivity and moderate specificity for the detection of PE in outpatients. The diagnostic indexes compare favorably with those found in a predicate metaanalysis of the D-dimer ELISA assay (4). On the basis of diagnostic accuracy, our data suggest that the test characteristics of the immunoturbidimetric D-dimer assay are similar to those of the ELISA D-dimer assay.


   Acknowledgments
 
We would like to thank the following corresponding authors: Shannon Bates, MD (Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada); Henri Bounameaux, MD (Division of Angiology and Haemostasis, Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland); David Bruns, MD (Department of Pathology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA); Markus Knecht, MD (Medizinesche Klinik am Krankenhaus Bruchsal, Germany); Michael Kovacs, MD (Department of Medicine, London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario, Canada); Karen MacKinnon, MLT (Department of Medicine, London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario, Canada); Guido Reber, PhD (Division of Angiology and Haemostasis, Geneva University Hospital, Geneva Switzerland); and Phillip Wells, MD (Department of Medicine, Ottawa Civic Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada). Joseph Lau is supported in part by a grant (R01 HS013328) from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Reprints are not available from the authors.


   Footnotes
 
1 Nonstandard abbreviations: ED, emergency department; PE, pulmonary embolism; SROC, summary ROC; TPR, true-positive rate; FPR, false-positive rate; and CI, confidence interval.

2 Note Added in Proof: This study has since been published (34).


   References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
 

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