Objectives: To validate the safety profile of a rapid ELISA D-dimer as the first diagnostic step in the clinical suspicion of pulmonary embolism (PE) in outpatients admitted to an emergency department (ED), and to retrospectively evaluate the appropriateness of the physician's prescription.
Design And Setting: An observational study of all patients admitted to the ED of an urban university teaching hospital with signs and symptoms justifying the prescription of a rapid ELISA D-dimer measurement (Vidas; Biomerieux; France) as the first line diagnostic test for PE. Acute PE was established or excluded according to an appropriate combination of the D-dimer concentration, the lung scintigraphy, the spiral computerized tomography (spiral CT), the venous ultrasonography, and the arteriography in case of uncertain results.