• Title of article

    Prognostic value of platelet indices in patients with acute pulmonary thromboembolism

  • Author/Authors

    Ghaffari, Samad Cardiovascular Research Center - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Parvizian, Nashmil Cardiovascular Research Center - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Pourafkari, Leili Department of Anesthesiology - State University of New York at Buffalo - Buffalo - NY - USA , Separham, Ahmad Cardiovascular Research Center - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Hajizadeh, Reza Department of Cardiology - Urmia University of Medical Sciences, Urmia , Nader, Nader D Department of Anesthesiology - State University of New York at Buffalo - Buffalo - NY - USA , Javanshir, Elnaz Cardiovascular Research Center - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Sepehrvand, Nariman Mazankowski Alberta Heart Institute - University of Alberta - Edmonton - Alberta - Canada , Tajlil, Arezou Cardiovascular Research Center - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Nasiri, Babak Cardiovascular Research Center - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences

  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    56
  • To page
    62
  • Abstract
    Introduction: Given the role of platelets in thrombus formation, markers of platelet activation may be able to predict outcomes in patients with acute pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE). Methods: In a prospective cohort study, 492 patients with acute PTE were enrolled. Patients were evaluated for platelet indices including mean platelet volume (MPV), platelet distribution width (PDW), and platelet-lymphocyte-ratio (PLR), as well as for the simplified Pulmonary Embolism Severity Index (PESI) risk score. The primary endpoint was in-hospital all-cause mortality. Major adverse cardiopulmonary events (MACPE, composite of mortality, thrombolysis, mechanical ventilation and surgical embolectomy during index hospitalization) and all-cause death during follow-up were secondary endpoints. Results: MPV, PDW and PLR were 9.9±1.0 fl, 13.5±6.1%, and 14.7±14.5, respectively, in the total cohort. Whilst MPV was higher in those with adverse events (10.1±1.0 vs 9.9±1.0 fl; P = 0.019), PDW and PLR were not different between two groups. MPV with a cut-off point of 9.85 fl had a sensitivity of 81% and a specificity of 50% in predicting in-hospital mortality, but it had lower performance in predicting MACPE (Area under the curve: AUC 0.58; 95%CI 0.52-0.63) or long-term mortality (AUC 0.54; 95% CI 0.47-0.61). The AUC for all these three markers were lower than the AUC calculated for the simplified PESI score (0.80; 0.71-0.88). Conclusion: Platelet indices had only fair-to-good predictive performance in predicting in-hospital all-cause death. Established PTE risk scoring models such as simplified PESI outperform these indices in predicting adverse outcomes.
  • Keywords
    Pulmonary Thromboembolism , Platelet , Mean Platelet Volume , Platelet Distribution Width , Mortaity
  • Journal title
    Journal of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Research (JCVTR)
  • Serial Year
    2020
  • Record number

    2519362