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Review: a low clinical probability plus a normal d-dimer test result excludes a diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis

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Q In patients with suspected deep venous thrombosis (DVT), is a combination of rapid d-dimer testing and estimation of clinical probability accurate for excluding a diagnosis of DVT?

METHODS

Embedded ImageData sources:

Medline (1993–2003), Cochrane Database of Abstracts and Reviews, and bibliographies of relevant articles.

Embedded ImageStudy selection and assessment:

prospective studies (published in English) of consecutive outpatients with features of DVT that used a rapid d-dimer assay on at least a subgroup of patients; estimated the risk of DVT using a validated clinical probability tool that categorised patients as having low, intermediate, or high risk for DVT; evaluated outpatient data separately if inpatients were included; evaluated DVT data separately if patients with pulmonary embolism were included; had 100% patient follow up at ⩾3 months; …

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Footnotes

  • For correspondence: Dr T L Fancher, Division of General Medicine, University of California at Davis, Sacramento, CA, USA. Tonya.Fancherucdmc.ucdavis.edu

  • Source of funding: US Health Resources and Services Administration’s Faculty Development in Primary Care.