| Literature DB >> 15196316 |
Abstract
Persons who suffer traumatic injury are likely to be transfused with considerable amounts of blood during initial resuscitation efforts. Oxygen-carrying solutions are currently in clinical testing as substitutes for red blood cells. Although these agents may eliminate many concerns associated with blood administration (short shelf life, infectious and immunologic risks, the need to type and cross-match), early cell-free hemoglobin solutions demonstrated nephrotoxicity and were associated with pulmonary and systemic hypertension, among other adverse events. Newer polymerized hemoglobin solutions show acceptable safety profiles in the surgical setting and studies are being designed, some with funding from the US Department of Defense, to evaluate their efficacy in hemorrhaging trauma victims.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15196316 PMCID: PMC3226147 DOI: 10.1186/cc2412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Red cell substitutes under active (phase III) investigation
| Company | Product | Type | Clinical trial status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northfield Laboratories | PolyHeme® | Human glutaraldehyde polymerized | Ongoing phase III multicenter trials in North America in vascular and general surgery. Initiating phase III DOD trial in trauma to begin in the prehospital setting |
| Biopure | Hemopure®: hemoglobin glutamer-bovine | Bovine glutaraldehyde polymerized | Completed phase III multicenter trial USA orthopedic surgery. Biologic license application under review by US Food and Drug Administration. Approved for use in South Africa. Initiating phase III DOD trial in trauma to begin in the prehospital and emergency center settings |
| Hemosol Inc. | HemoLink™: hemoglobin raffimer | Human O-raffinose polymerized | Completed phase III multicenter trial in coronary bypass patients in Canada and the UK. Planning anemia trials in North America |
DOD, Department of Defense.