Age-adjusted D-dimer safely rules out leg clots
In emergency outpatients with low or moderate suspicion, an age-adjusted D-dimer cutoff safely avoided more leg ultrasounds.
*Prospective multicenter diagnostic management study; Level 2 (OCEBM).
Citation
Le Gal G, Robert-Ebadi H, Thiruganasambandamoorthy V, et al; ADJUST-DVT Investigators. Age-Adjusted D-Dimer Cutoff Levels to Rule Out Deep Vein Thrombosis. JAMA. 2026;335(5):416-424. doi:10.1001/jama.2025.21561
Background
D-dimer testing helps exclude deep vein thrombosis (a blood clot in a leg vein), but it becomes less specific with age, leading to more unnecessary ultrasound tests. Age-adjusted D-dimer cutoffs are accepted for suspected lung clots, but were not well validated for suspected leg clots.
Patients
3205 emergency-department outpatients with suspected lower-limb deep vein thrombosis in 27 centers (Belgium, Canada, France, Switzerland). Excluded: pregnancy, age <18, already on blood thinners, symptoms suggesting lung clot, life expectancy <3 months, unable to consent or follow-up.
Intervention
Sequential strategy using Wells score, a highly sensitive D-dimer, and ultrasound; D-dimer negative if <500 μg/L (<50 years) or <age×10 μg/L (≥50 years).
Control
Conventional D-dimer cutoff of 500 μg/L (comparison within the low/moderate-suspicion group).
Outcome
Primary: blood clots in leg or lungs during follow-up among patients with D-dimer 500 μg/L to below the age-adjusted cutoff. Secondary: proportion safely ruled out without ultrasound.
Follow-up Period
3 months.
Results
| Finding (low/moderate suspicion group) |
Result |
Clinical impact |
| Follow-up clots when D-dimer 500 μg/L to below age-adjusted cutoff (primary) |
0/161 (0%; 95% CI, 0% to 2.3%) |
Suggests safe rule-out in this subgroup |
| Additional patients ruled out by age-adjusted cutoff (vs 500 μg/L cutoff) |
Absolute increase: 7.4% (161/2169) |
Number needed to test ≈14 to avoid 1 ultrasound |
| Patients ≥75 years: negative D-dimer proportion |
8.7% to 26.1% (absolute +17.4%) |
Number needed to test ≈6 to avoid 1 ultrasound |
Wells score: a bedside clinical scoring system estimating pretest likelihood of a leg clot.
Reported as intention-to-diagnose and per-protocol; primary subgroup result was consistent in both.
Limitations
Not randomized, so it did not directly compare outcomes against a strict 500 μg/L-only strategy. Multiple D-dimer tests were used across sites. Some clinicians ordered ultrasound despite negative D-dimer, which may limit real-world efficiency estimates. Findings do not apply to clots in other body locations.
Funding
Swiss National Research Foundation; Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada; public/nonprofit grants.
Clinical Application
For suspected leg deep vein thrombosis with low/moderate Wells score, use age-adjusted D-dimer (age×10 μg/L if ≥50) to safely reduce ultrasound, especially in older adults.