| Literature DB >> 20156316 |
Bartolomeu Nascimento1, Jeannie Callum, Gordon Rubenfeld, Joao Baptista Rezende Neto, Yulia Lin, Sandro Rizoli.
Abstract
Fresh frozen plasma (FFP) is indicated for the management of massive bleedings. Recent audits suggest physician knowledge of FFP is inadequate and half of the FFP transfused in critical care is inappropriate. Trauma is among the largest consumers of FFP. Current trauma resuscitation guidelines recommend FFP to correct coagulopathy only after diagnosed by laboratory tests, often when overt dilutional coagulopathy already exists. The evidence supporting these guidelines is limited and bleeding remains a major cause of trauma-related death. Recent studies demonstrated that coagulopathy occurs early in trauma. A novel early formula-driven haemostatic resuscitation proposes addressing coagulopathy early in massive bleedings with FFP at a near 1:1 ratio with red blood cells. Recent retrospective reports suggest such strategy significantly reduces mortality, and its use is gradually expanding to nontraumatic bleedings in critical care. The supporting studies, however, have bias limiting the interpretation of the results. Furthermore, logistical considerations including need for immediately available universal donor AB plasma, short life after thawing, potential waste and transfusion-associated complications have challenged its implementation. The present review focuses on FFP transfusion in massive bleeding and critically appraises the evidence on formula-driven resuscitation, providing resources to allow clinicians to develop informed opinion, given the current deficient and conflicting evidence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20156316 PMCID: PMC2875489 DOI: 10.1186/cc8205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Arguments for and against the adoption of early formula-driven haemostatic resuscitation in trauma
| Pros | Cons | |
|---|---|---|
| Mortality | Retrospective studies suggesting a reduction in mortality from exsanguinations | Data limited by survivorship bias |
| Increase in FFP and platelet use might increase the risk of acute lung injury, multiple organ failure, thrombosis, sepsis and death | ||
| Coagulopathy | Prevention and treatment of coagulopathy due to transfusion of clotting factors | Difficult to identify patients early on who will develop coagulopathy and in fact need transfusion of FFP and platelets |
| Minimize crystalloid use (decrease the risk of dilution) | Uncertainty about the ideal dose of FFP in the trauma situation | |
| Laboratory tests | No need for coagulation tests | Unnecessary exposure to AB plasma (in some countries, a higher risk of transfusion-related acute lung injury due to higher proportion of female donors) |
| Avoid the delay of waiting for blood test results | ||
| Blood bank systems | More timely issuing of blood components | The waste of FFP will increase (shortage of AB plasma) |
| No time needed to thaw FFP (AB plasma available at all times) | May increase the complications associated with FFP and platelet transfusion | |
| Decrease the need for communication between blood bank and the medical team |
FFP, fresh frozen plasma.
Figure 1Recently proposed mechanism for coagulopathy in trauma. Tissue trauma activates the coagulation process via tissue factor (TF) and activated factor VII (FVIIa), formerly named the extrinsic pathway, to stop bleeding. Concomitantly, endothelial damage/ischaemia leads to release of physiologic anticoagulants and antifibrinolytics (that is, thrombomodulin (TM), protein C and tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)) due to inflammation and tissue hypoperfusion, to prevent thrombosis. Early coagulopathy develops when there is an imbalance in this process, with excessive anticoagulation, hyperfibrinolysis and consumption of clotting factors. Resuscitation with crystalloid and red blood cells (RBC) can cause/worsen dilution, acidosis and hypothermia. PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1.
Challenges and proposed solutions to future clinical trials on haemostatic resuscitation
| Most important challenges | Proposed solutions |
|---|---|
| Avoid survivorship bias | Exclude patients not expected to live long enough to receive plasma |
| Precise documentation of the time of transfusions and death | |
| Perform analysis of transfusion as a time-dependent variable | |
| Avoid contamination of the control arm and avoid delay in initiating 1:1 transfusions in the intervention arm | Transfusion guidelines for both arms clear and easy to follow |
| Close cooperation between blood bank, trauma, anaesthesia and critical care | |
| Thawed AB plasma 24/7 or rapid thawing (microwave) | |
| Minimize time for results of laboratory tests - consider point-of-care testing | |
| Multiple interventions concomitantly tested | Standardize all aspects of resuscitation (that is, amount and type of intravenous fluid; procoagulant drugs) in control and intervention groups |
| Measure clotting factor levels | |
| Discriminate coagulopathic from mechanical bleeding | Measure indicators of coagulopathy: |
| • Thromboelastography | |
| • Clotting factor assays | |
| • Markers of hyperfibrinolysis | |
| • Tissue hypoperfusion (lactate, base deficit) | |
| • Progression of bleeding by computerized tomography scan (that is, progression brain | |
| contusion, retroperitoneal haematomas) | |
| • Ask the physician's opinion (that is, surgeon, anaesthetist, intensivist) | |
| Immediate cessation of component therapy | Evidence that bleeding has stopped |
| Consider ending by 6 hours | |
| Outcome | Consider restoration of haemostasis competence |
| Need for large samples | Consider a feasibility trial prior to a large multicentre trial to identify major challenges |
| Consent | Need for delayed consent |