Abstract

Introduction: Computed tomography with pulmonary angiography (CTPA) is the gold standard for diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE). A nearly five-fold increase in the use of CTPA was observed from 2004 to 2016 in the United States. Hypothesis: Suboptimal utilization of validated diagnostic predictive tools with D-dimer might have led to excessive use of CTPA in a large public hospital in Bronx, New York. Methods: We conducted a retrospective review of patients who underwent CTPA from January to October 2021. Two independent reviewers, blinded to each other and to the CTPA and D-dimer results, estimated the clinical probability for PE using the Well’s criteria, YEARS criteria, and the revised Geneva score. Patients were classified based on the presence or absence of PE in the CTPA. Chi-square and Fischer's exact test were used to compare discrete variables. Results: 504 patients were included in the analysis (median age: 56 years, female: 59.1%). The clinical probability for PE was considered to be low by both independent reviewers in 303 (60.2%), 250 (49.7%), and 108 (21.5%) patients based on Well’s criteria, YEARS criteria, and the revised Geneva score, respectively. D-dimer testing was conducted in less than half of patients with low clinical probability [Well’s:(43.2%), YEARS:(49.7%), Geneva:(46.3%)]. Based on Well’s criteria, of 69/131 patients (52.7%) with a D-dimer < 500 ng/ml, 3/69 (4.3%) were diagnosed with PE. As per YEARS criteria, of 51/100 patients (51%) with a D-dimer < 500 ng/ml, 3/51 (5.9%) were diagnosed with PE. Based on the revised Geneva score, of 26/50 (52%) patients with a D-dimer of < 500 ng/ml, 1/26 (3.8%) patient was diagnosed with PE. All PEs were subsegmental. Conclusion: Many patients underwent CTPA despite having a low probability of PE due to suboptimal utilization of validated diagnostic predictive tools with D-dimer. Using a D-dimer cut-off of <500 ng/ml in patients with a low probability of PE would have missed only a small number of subsegmental PE.

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