# D-Dimer/Fibrinogen Ratio and Radiological Severity Scores in Acute Pulmonary Embolism: Is There Room for a New Thrombus-Burden Marker?

**Authors:** Francesco Tiralongo, Lorenzo Musmeci, Stefania Tamburrini, Giacomo Sica, Mariano Scaglione, Mariapaola Tiralongo, Rosita Comune, Corrado Ini’, Davide Giuseppe Castiglione, Emanuele David, Pietro Valerio Foti, Stefano Palmucci, Antonio Basile

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15222875 · Diagnostics · 2025-11-13

## TL;DR

This study explores whether the D-dimer/fibrinogen ratio can predict the severity of acute pulmonary embolism as effectively as existing markers like D-dimer and CT-based assessments.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the D-dimer/fibrinogen ratio as a potential new marker for thrombus burden and right ventricular dysfunction in acute pulmonary embolism.

## Key findings

- D-d/F correlated modestly with CT-based thrombus burden and right ventricular dysfunction, similar to D-dimer.
- CT-based markers like RV/LV ratio showed stronger associations with disease severity than D-d/F.
- Adding RV/LV to a model improved prediction of high clot burden, while D-d/F lost significance.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: The D-dimer/fibrinogen ratio (D-d/F) has been proposed as a composite marker of fibrinolysis–coagulation balance. Whether D-d/F reflects CT-quantified thrombus burden and right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) in acute pulmonary embolism (PE) remains uncertain. Methods: Single-center retrospective cohort of consecutive adults with CTPA-confirmed PE (January 2022–October 2024). D-d/F = D-dimer (µg/mL)/fibrinogen (mg/dL). Thrombus burden: Qanadli and Mastora indices. RVD: RV/LV ratio, septal bowing, and IVC reflux. Associations: Spearman’s ρ with Steiger’s Z for between-marker comparisons. Discrimination for Qanadli ≥ 40% and RV/LV ≥ 1.0 by ROC. Two exploratory logistic models predicted Qanadli ≥ 40%: Model-1 (age, sex, D-d/F) and Model-2 adding RV/LV. Results: Among 112 patients (mean age 65.4 ± 15.6; 60% men), D-d/F correlated modestly with Qanadli (ρ = 0.233, p = 0.013) and Mastora (ρ = 0.274, p = 0.0034); strengths were similar to D-dimer (no between-marker difference: Steiger’s Z both p > 0.5). D-d/F correlated with RV/LV (ρ = 0.335, p < 0.001) and with IVC reflux (ρ = 0.247, p = 0.0085). CT indices related more strongly to hemodynamic markers (e.g., Qanadli with RV/LV ρ = 0.571, p < 0.0001; Mastora with RV/LV ρ = 0.620, p < 0.0001). Patients with septal bowing had higher D-dimer (median 4.65 vs. 2.74 µg/mL, p = 0.0037), higher D-d/F (1.04 vs. 0.61, p = 0.0018), and higher clot-burden scores (both p < 0.0001). For Qanadli ≥ 40%, AUCs were 0.621 for D-d/F (cut-off > 0.795; sens 58.8%, spec 62.3%) and 0.618 for D-dimer (>1.894 µg/mL; 84.3%, 37.7%); AUCs did not differ (p = 0.93). For RV/LV ≥ 1.0, AUCs were 0.693 for D-d/F (>0.607; 83.8%, 52.0%) and 0.684 for D-dimer (>2.849 µg/mL; 75.7%, 54.7%); p = 0.72. In Model-1, D-d/F predicted Qanadli ≥ 40% (OR = 1.43 per unit, p = 0.043; AUC = 0.64). After adding RV/LV (Model-2), discrimination improved (AUC = 0.796), RV/LV remained a strong predictor (p < 0.0001), and D-d/F was not retained (p = 0.287). Conclusions: In acute PE, D-d/F tracks thrombus burden and RVD to a degree comparable to D-dimer, but effects are modest. CT-based markers—particularly RV/LV—better reflect disease severity and are more predictive of high clot burden. Risk prediction and incremental utility of D-d/F were not assessed and warrant prospective evaluation.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** pulmonary embolism (MONDO:0005279)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** FGB (fibrinogen beta chain) [NCBI Gene 2244] {aka HEL-S-78p}
- **Diseases:** reflux (MESH:D005764), Thrombus (MESH:D013927), Acute Pulmonary Embolism (MESH:D011655), RVD (MESH:D018497)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12651458/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12651458