SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Fibrin Degradation Product – Marker for Thrombosis, DIC & VTE Exclusion)

Synonyms

  • D-dimer
  • Fibrin D-dimer
  • Cross-linked fibrin degradation product
  • FDP D-dimer
  • Fibrin fragment D
  • Fibrin split product

Units of Measurement

Non-FEU (standard mass units)

  • μg/mL
  • ng/mL
  • mg/L
  • μg/L

FEU Units (Fibrinogen Equivalent Units)

(Most widely used in modern assays)

  • μg FEU/mL
  • ng FEU/mL
  • mg FEU/L
  • μg FEU/L

1 FEU = amount of D-dimer derived from 1 unit of fibrinogen
1 μg/mL FEU = 1000 ng/mL FEU = 1 mg/L FEU

Description

D-dimer is a specific breakdown product of cross-linked fibrin formed during fibrinolysis. It reflects:

  • Activation of coagulation (clot formation)
  • Activation of plasmin/fibrinolysis (clot breakdown)

D-dimer is used primarily to exclude venous thromboembolism (VTE) when pre-test probability is low or moderate.

Primary clinical uses:

  • Exclusion of deep vein thrombosis (DVT)
  • Exclusion of pulmonary embolism (PE)
  • Diagnosis/monitoring of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
  • Coagulopathy in COVID-19, sepsis, trauma
  • Post-surgical or post-thrombotic monitoring

Physiological Role

D-dimer is formed when:

  1. Fibrinogen → fibrin (via thrombin)
  2. Factor XIII cross-links fibrin
  3. Plasmin breaks it down → releases D-dimer fragments

Thus D-dimer is a marker of active clot formation AND breakdown.

Clinical Significance

High D-Dimer

(Most important – indicates increased clot turnover)

1. Venous Thromboembolism

  • Deep vein thrombosis (DVT)
  • Pulmonary embolism (PE)
  • Used with Wells score → if low probability + low D-dimer = rule out VTE

2. Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)

Extremely elevated values; used with:

  • Platelets
  • PT, aPTT
  • Fibrinogen

3. Trauma / Surgery / Burns

Increased due to tissue injury.

4. Pregnancy

Physiological rise (up to 4–5×).

5. Malignancy

Especially advanced cancers.

6. Infections

Sepsis, pneumonia, COVID-19.

7. Liver disease

Due to impaired clearance.

8. Age

Natural increase with aging.

Low/Normal D-Dimer

Helps exclude VTE when paired with a low pretest probability.

Reference Intervals & Clinical Cutoffs

(ISTH + ACEP + ACCP + Mayo + ARUP)

Normal Range

  • < 500 ng/mL FEU
    (or <0.5 μg/mL FEU or <0.5 mg/L FEU)

Age-Adjusted D-Dimer Cutoff (recommended for >50 years)

Cutoff (ng/mL FEU)=Age×10\text{Cutoff (ng/mL FEU)} = \text{Age} \times 10Cutoff (ng/mL FEU)=Age×10

Example: Age 70 → cutoff = 700 ng/mL FEU

DIC

Levels often >4000–10,000 ng/mL FEU

Mass Units Equivalence

UnitEquivalent to 0.5 mg/L FEU
0.5 mg/L FEU= 500 ng/mL FEU
= 0.5 μg/mL FEU= 500 μg/L FEU

Conversions (FEU standard)

1 μg/mL FEU=1000 ng/mL FEU1\ \text{μg/mL FEU} = 1000\ \text{ng/mL FEU}1 μg/mL FEU=1000 ng/mL FEU 1 mg/L FEU=1000 μg/L FEU1\ \text{mg/L FEU} = 1000\ \text{μg/L FEU}1 mg/L FEU=1000 μg/L FEU

Non-FEU (D-dimer mass units)

Some assays report D-dimer directly (not FEU):

1 μg/mL≠1 μg/mL FEU1\ \text{μg/mL} \neq 1\ \text{μg/mL FEU}1 μg/mL=1 μg/mL FEU

Conversion typically:

1 μg/mL D-dimer≈2 μg/mL FEU1\ \text{μg/mL D-dimer} ≈ 2\ \text{μg/mL FEU}1 μg/mL D-dimer≈2 μg/mL FEU

(Manufacturer-specific; always check lab method.)

Diagnostic Uses

1. Excluding DVT/PE

  • Must combine with Wells score
  • Low Wells + D-dimer <500 ng/mL FEU = VTE ruled out

2. Diagnosing/Monitoring DIC

Used in DIC scoring systems with:

  • Platelets
  • PT
  • Fibrinogen

3. COVID-19 Coagulopathy

Higher levels correlate with:

  • ARDS
  • ICU need
  • Mortality

4. Post-operative Monitoring

Detects excessive clot formation.

5. Pregnancy Complications

Elevated in:

  • Pre-eclampsia
  • Placental abruption
  • DIC

6. Cancer-Associated Thrombosis

Analytical Notes

  • Plasma (citrate) is preferred
  • Immunoturbidimetric and ELISA assays used
  • Lipemia/hemolysis interfere minimally
  • Always specify FEU vs non-FEU units
  • D-dimer is highly sensitive but not specific

Clinical Pearls

  • A negative D-dimer is more powerful than a positive one.
  • D-dimer is almost always high in hospitalized patients-interpret with context.
  • Use age-adjusted cutoffs in older adults to avoid unnecessary imaging.
  • Very high D-dimer does not specify the cause - think DIC, PE/DVT, cancer, sepsis.
  • After 3–6 days of VTE symptoms, D-dimer sensitivity decreases.

Interesting Fact

The D-dimer test became globally recognized during the COVID-19 pandemic, where high levels predicted severity and mortality - leading it to become one of the most ordered lab tests worldwide.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Coagulation Markers.
  2. ISTH Guidelines - D-dimer Use in VTE & DIC.
  3. ACCP Antithrombotic Guidelines.
  4. ACEP Clinical Policy - D-dimer in PE/DVT.
  5. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - D-dimer.
  6. ARUP Consult - D-dimer.
  7. NIH / MedlinePlus - D-dimer Test.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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