Association of changes in D-dimer and other coagulation markers with changes in Marder score after treatment of acute venous thrombosis.

Category Primary study
JournalJournal of thrombosis and thrombolysis
Year 2002
AIM: Coagulation markers are sensitive tools to assess ongoing thrombus formation. An association between changes in these markers and changes in venographic Marder scores in patients with acute deep vein-thrombosis treated with low-molecular-weight (LMWH) or unfractionated heparin (UFH) has not been reported. METHODS: We investigated differences in coagulation parameters before and at the end of a twelve days the treatment of patients with an improvement versus no improvement of the venographic findings at the end of the treatment with LMWH (n = 48) and UFH (n = 41). RESULTS: Patients with lower values in the Marder score had lower D-dimer levels at day 12 compared to entry treated with UFH and LMWH (p < 0.001). Not improved Marder scores paralleled unchanged D-dimer levels at end of both treatments. Higher values of factor-Xa inhibition and Heptest assay (p < 0.001) were measured at the end of treatment in LMWH- in contrast to UFH-patients. Thrombin inhibition was lower and unchanged at day 12 in patients treated with LMWH and UFH, respectively. Thrombin generation inhibition and release of tissue-factor pathway inhibitor remained unchanged in both groups. CONCLUSION: An improved Marder score is associated with a decrease of D-dimer during UFH and LMWH treatment of deep vein-thrombosis.
Epistemonikos ID: b41064190212904f121f14bb93d2ef27a8e9f6a4
First added on: May 13, 2022