Plasma D-dimer found noninferior to serum CRP in diagnosis of PJI
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Published results showed plasma D-dimer was noninferior to serum C-reactive protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate in the diagnosis of periprosthetic joint infection.
“This study demonstrated that plasma D-dimer had comparable diagnostic accuracy to traditional inflammatory markers, such as CRP and [erythrocyte sedimentation rate] ESR, in the diagnosis of PJI,” Saad Tarabichi, MD, postdoctoral research fellow at Rothman Orthopaedic Institute, told Healio. “Furthermore, we found that D-dimer may help improve diagnostic confidence in a number of clinical scenarios.”
Tarabichi and colleagues preoperatively measured plasma D-dimer, ESR, CRP and fibrinogen among 502 patients undergoing revision hip or knee arthroplasty. Researchers used receiver operating characteristic curves to assess the utility of each biomarker in the diagnosis of PJI, which was defined per a modified version of the 2018 International Consensus Meeting criteria. Researchers also performed pairwise comparison with Bonferroni correction to determine whether the differences in areas under the curve between the markers were significant.
Of the 412 patients included in the study, researchers found 76.9% did not have an infection and 23.1% had an infection. Results showed plasma D-dimer, CRP, ESR and fibrinogen all demonstrated comparable accuracy for the diagnosis of PJI.
“In a subanalysis of patients with a diagnosis of PJI caused by indolent organisms, D-dimer outperformed CRP and ESR and demonstrated a sensitivity of 93.8%,” Tarabichi said.