| Literature DB >> 21392371 |
Nicola Curry1, Sally Hopewell, Carolyn Dorée, Chris Hyde, Karim Brohi, Simon Stanworth.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Worldwide, trauma is a leading cause of death and disability. Haemorrhage is responsible for up to 40% of trauma deaths. Recent strategies to improve mortality rates have focused on optimal methods of early hemorrhage control and correction of coagulopathy. We undertook a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCT) which evaluated trauma patients with hemorrhagic shock within the first 24 hours of injury and appraised how the interventions affected three outcomes: bleeding and/or transfusion requirements; correction of trauma induced coagulopathy and mortality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21392371 PMCID: PMC3219356 DOI: 10.1186/cc10096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram for immediate bleeding management in trauma patients.
On-going studies
| On-going study | Clinical group of trauma patients | Intervention details | Comparator details | Primary endpoint | Target number to be recruited | Expected end date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITU patients, fluid resuscitation | Colloids | Crystalloids | 28 day mortality | 3,010 | March 2011 | |
| Adults, SBP < 90 mmHg, requiring laparotomy or thoracotomy, | Target minimum mean arterial BP 50 mmHg | Target minimum mean arterial BP 65 mmHg | 30 day survival | 271 | July 2011 | |
| Adults, requiring ≥3 litres of fluid | HES 130/0.4 in saline (Voluven) | 0.9% saline | Fluid volumes over first 24 hours | 140 | December 2009 | |
| Adults, requiring four units of RBC in two hours and ongoing blood loss | FFP:RBC:platelets ratio of 1:1:1 - formula | Standard of care | Protocol compliance at 12 hours | 70 | October 2011 |
FFP, fresh frozen plasma; GCS, Glasgow coma score; ITU, intensive care unit; MAP, mean arterial pressure; RBC, red blood cell; SBP, systolic blood pressure.
Terminated studies
| Study | Clinical group of trauma patients | Intervention details | Comparator details | Primary endpoint | Completion/Termination date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults, polytrauma, GCS > 9, ISS > 16 and ASCOT score = 2 to 50% | Endovascular catheter + forced air warming | Forced air warming | Morbidity during length of stay | Suspended July 2010. Insufficient numbers of patients recruited | |
| Adults, prehospital SBP ≤ 70, or prehospital SBP 71-90 and HR ≥108 | Arm A: 7.5% hypertonic saline/6% Dextran-70 Arm B: 7.5% hypertonic saline | Arm C: 0.9% normal saline | 28-day survival | Terminated August 2009 - no difference in 28-day survival (futility). Analysis reported earlier but not higher mortality with hypertonic saline arms. | |
| Adults, SBP < 90 mmHg | Bolus vasopressin 4 U, then continuous infusion 2.4 U/hour for five hours | Normal saline | To develop new resuscitation regimens | Terminated April 2009 - poor accrual rate |
ASCOT, a severity characterization of trauma score; rFVIIa, recombinant activated factor VII; SBP, systolic blood pressure.
Figure 2Risks for bias in included RCTs. We assessed study risk for bias according to recommendations from the Cochrane Collaboration [23]. *Whether the study reported methods of randomization sufficiently to meet current CONSORT guidelines for true random allocation of participants [71]. ^ Whether the study reported methods to conceal allocation sufficiently to determine whether the chosen intervention for a participant could have been predicted in advance. † Whether the study reported methods by which patients, staff or assessors were prevented from knowing the intervention given to each participant. ‡ Whether the study described loss-to-follow up figures.