Abstract

The best anticoagulation level in patients with mechanical heart valve prostheses is still being debated. D-dimer, which detects the presence of cross-linked fibrin degradation products, has been demonstrated to be a useful marker of coagulation activation. This study was designed to verify whether heart valve prostheses in anticoagulated patients are associated with abnormalities in D-dimer plasma levels, and if so, whether such levels are related to the anticoagulation level and/or whether they could be predictive of acute vascular or hemorrhagic events. In 132 patients with single and 10 with double mechanical valve replacement, international normalized ratio (INR) and D-dimer plasma levels were determined. The INR levels of the previous 8 months were reviewed to assess the time that each patient spent in the therapeutic range. The D-dimer plasma levels were compared with those obtained from 102 matched control subjects. The patients were then followed up for 2 years to record acute vascular and hemorrhagic events. For the entire group, D-dimer plasma levels in patients were the same as those in the control group. Patients with double valve replacement had higher D-dimer plasma levels than either monovalvular implant patients or control subjects. Patients who had spent < 75% of the time within the assigned anticoagulation range had higher values for D-dimer plasma levels (median, 270 vs 198 ng/mL, P = .02). The major determinants of D-dimer plasma levels were age (R2 = .07, P = .009) and the percentage of time spent below the predetermined INR level (R2 = .09, P = .001). During follow-up, 19 acute vascular and 16 hemorrhagic events occurred. High D-dimer tertile was the only parameter predicting the occurrence of thromboembolic events. In patients with mechanical heart valve prostheses, the D-dimer plasma level depended on the thoroughness of anticoagulation. Patients in the upper tertile of D-dimer values have an approximately 5-fold risk of vascular thromboembolic events. D-dimer determination can therefore be useful in detecting patients who are at a higher risk of severe vascular events.

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