# Lipid-to-neutrophil ratios in predicting in-hospital outcomes in pulmonary thromboembolism

**Authors:** Neda Roshanravan, Erfan Banisefid, Samad Ghaffari, Sami Rassouli, Amirreza Naseri, Tohid Yahyapoor, Elnaz Javanshir, Sina Hamzezadeh

PMC · DOI: 10.34172/jcvtr.33254 · 2024-12-23

## TL;DR

This study shows that lipid-to-neutrophil ratios can help predict survival outcomes for patients with acute pulmonary thromboembolism.

## Contribution

The study introduces lipid-to-neutrophil ratios as potential early prognostic markers for in-hospital survival in PTE patients.

## Key findings

- Higher cholesterol/neutrophil, LDL/neutrophil, and HDL/neutrophil ratios correlate with better in-hospital survival in PTE patients.
- Specific cut-off values for these ratios show moderate sensitivity and specificity in predicting short-term survival.
- Lipid-to-neutrophil ratios measured within 24 hours of hospitalization may serve as early prognostic indicators.

## Abstract

Acute pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) is one of the leading causes of death and severe disability. Considering the impact of inflammation and lipid profile on prevalence and prognosis of deep vein thrombosis and PTE, this study was conducted to assess the predictive value of lipid-to-neutrophil count ratios for the short-term survival of PTE patients.

This study is an analytical cross-sectional study. Data regarding the demographics, past medical history, vital signs, laboratory variables, and the outcomes of hospitalization were gathered from the Tabriz PTE registry. The receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve and area under curve (AUC) were utilized for assessing the prognostic values. SPSS 26 was used for all of the statistical analysis.

The population of this analytical cross-sectional study consists of 547 PTE patients of which 41 patients (7.5%) died during hospitalization. There was a significant difference between death and survived groups regarding cholesterol (146.00[60.50] vs. 165.50[59.75]; p-value<0.01), LDL (80.00[48.00] vs. 102.00[52.00]; p-value<0.01), HDL (31.00[19.00] vs. 35.00[14.00]; p-value=0.04). Cholesterol/neutrophil*1000 with a cut-off value of 22.014 (sensitivity: 56.7%; specificity: 61.3%), LDL/neutrophil*1000 with a cut-off value of 10.909 (sensitivity: 69.3%; specificity: 51.9%) and HDL/neutrophile *1000 with a cut-off value of 4.150 (sensitivity: 61.9%; specificity: 58.1%) can predict short-term survival in patients with acute PTE.

Based on our findings, patients with higher cholesterol/neutrophil, LDL/neutrophil, and HDL/neutrophil ratios have a better in-hospital prognosis and measurement of lipid-to-neutrophil ratio in the first 24 hours of hospitalization may be a valuable marker for determining the early prognosis of PTE. However, additional clinical studies are suggested for a more definitive conclusion.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** deep vein thrombosis (MESH:D020246), death (MESH:D003643), inflammation (MESH:D007249), Acute pulmonary thromboembolism (MESH:D011655)
- **Chemicals:** Cholesterol (MESH:D002784), Lipid (MESH:D008055)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11866772/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11866772