The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement Study

Diagnosing acute pulmonary embolism (PE) involves clinical suspicion in combination with sequential diagnostic tests including d -dimer laboratory assays. Although the sensitivity of this assay is well validated and thoroughly tested, a false-positive result can lead to unnecessary and costly testin...

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Main Authors: Marcel M. Letourneau DO, Marc Zughaib MPH, MS4DO, Abeer Berry DO, Marcel Zughaib MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-09-01
Series:Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1076029620939182
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spelling doaj-2b120b4a7be94544ad1b999d2be380f12020-11-25T03:59:44ZengSAGE PublishingClinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis1938-27232020-09-012610.1177/1076029620939182The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement StudyMarcel M. Letourneau DO0Marc Zughaib MPH, MS4DO1Abeer Berry DO2Marcel Zughaib MD3 Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, , Southfield, MI, USA , East Landing, MI, USA Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, , Southfield, MI, USA Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, , Southfield, MI, USADiagnosing acute pulmonary embolism (PE) involves clinical suspicion in combination with sequential diagnostic tests including d -dimer laboratory assays. Although the sensitivity of this assay is well validated and thoroughly tested, a false-positive result can lead to unnecessary and costly testing. The age-adjusted d -dimer (AADD) has been suggested in the literature to improve the usefulness of d -dimer cutoffs and safely decrease iodine and radiation exposure associated with definitively ruling out PE with computed tomographic angiography (CTA). 1 We present an internal retrospective review utilizing the novel AADD cutoff to rule out PE and evaluate the potential extent of unnecessary testing with CTA. Using the AADD cutoff would have led to a 21.2% reduction in computerized tomography pulmonary embolus protocol. This internal quality improvement study suggests that changing our institutional conventional d -dimer to the novel AADD would provide a superior quality and cost–benefit.https://doi.org/10.1177/1076029620939182
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcel M. Letourneau DO
Marc Zughaib MPH, MS4DO
Abeer Berry DO
Marcel Zughaib MD
spellingShingle Marcel M. Letourneau DO
Marc Zughaib MPH, MS4DO
Abeer Berry DO
Marcel Zughaib MD
The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement Study
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis
author_facet Marcel M. Letourneau DO
Marc Zughaib MPH, MS4DO
Abeer Berry DO
Marcel Zughaib MD
author_sort Marcel M. Letourneau DO
title The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement Study
title_short The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement Study
title_full The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement Study
title_fullStr The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement Study
title_full_unstemmed The Burden of Unnecessary Testing From a Regularly Ordered Laboratory Assay: Age-Adjusted -Dimer Quality Improvement Study
title_sort burden of unnecessary testing from a regularly ordered laboratory assay: age-adjusted -dimer quality improvement study
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis
issn 1938-2723
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Diagnosing acute pulmonary embolism (PE) involves clinical suspicion in combination with sequential diagnostic tests including d -dimer laboratory assays. Although the sensitivity of this assay is well validated and thoroughly tested, a false-positive result can lead to unnecessary and costly testing. The age-adjusted d -dimer (AADD) has been suggested in the literature to improve the usefulness of d -dimer cutoffs and safely decrease iodine and radiation exposure associated with definitively ruling out PE with computed tomographic angiography (CTA). 1 We present an internal retrospective review utilizing the novel AADD cutoff to rule out PE and evaluate the potential extent of unnecessary testing with CTA. Using the AADD cutoff would have led to a 21.2% reduction in computerized tomography pulmonary embolus protocol. This internal quality improvement study suggests that changing our institutional conventional d -dimer to the novel AADD would provide a superior quality and cost–benefit.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1076029620939182
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