| Literature DB >> 26071040 |
Loïc Sentilhes1, Valérie Daniel2,3, Astrid Darsonval4,5, Philippe Deruelle6, Delphine Vardon7, Franck Perrotin8, Camille Le Ray9,10, Marie-Victoire Senat11, Norbert Winer12, Françoise Maillard13, Catherine Deneux-Tharaux14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is a major cause of maternal mortality, accounting for one quarter of all maternal deaths worldwide. Estimates of its incidence in the literature vary widely, from 3 % to 15 % of deliveries. Uterotonics after birth are the only intervention that has been shown to be effective in preventing PPH. Tranexamic acid (TXA), an antifibrinolytic agent, has been investigated as a potentially useful complement to uterotonics for prevention because it has been proved to reduce blood loss in elective surgery, bleeding in trauma patients, and menstrual blood loss. Randomized controlled trials for PPH prevention after cesarean (n = 10) and vaginal (n = 2) deliveries show that women who received TXA had significantly less postpartum blood loss without any increase in their rate of severe adverse effects. However, the quality of these trials was poor and they were not designed to test the effect of TXA on the reduction of PPH incidence. Large, adequately powered, multicenter randomized controlled trials are required before the widespread use of TXA to prevent PPH can be recommended. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26071040 PMCID: PMC4465316 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-015-0573-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Characteristics of the randomized trials that have assessed tranexamic acid for preventing postpartum hemorrhage after cesarean delivery
| Study [réf] | Country | Study design | Sample size | Study groups | Intervention | TXA Dosage/route | Primary outcome | Result | P value | Adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gai et al. al, (2004) [ | China | Multicenter, prospective, randomized controlled study | N = 180, primiparas | N = 91 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 10 min before CS | 1 g IV for 5 min | Postpartum blood loss not clearly specified | 359.3 mL vs 439.3 mL | 0.002 | No thromboembolic or other side effects reported |
| N = 89 (no placebo) | ||||||||||
| Gohel et al., (2007) [ | India | Prospective, randomized controlled study | N = 100, primiparas and multiparas | N = 50 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 20 min before CS | 1 g IV for 5 min | Postpartum blood loss not clearly specified | 374.9 mL vs 472.8 mL | 0.003 | No thromboembolic or other side effects reported |
| N = 50 (no placebo) | ||||||||||
| Sekhavat et al., (2009) [ | Iran | Prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled study | N = 90, primiparas | N = 45 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 10 min before CS | 1 g IV for 5 min | Postpartum blood loss not clearly specific | 28.0 mL vs 37.1 mL | 0.001 | No thromboembolic or other side effects reported |
| N = 45 (placebo) | ||||||||||
| Gungorkuk et al., (2011) [ | Turkey | Prospective, unicenter, double-blind, randomised controlled study | N = 666, primiparas and multiparas | N = 330 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 10 min before CS | 1 g IV for 5 min | Estimated blood loss during CS. | 600.7 mL vs 499.9 mL | <0.001 | Gastrointestinal side effects (16.3 %) in the experimental group |
| N = 330 (placebo) | ||||||||||
| Gastrointestinal side effects not mentioned for the placebo group. | ||||||||||
| No thromboembolic events | ||||||||||
| Movafegh et al., 2011 [ | Iran | Prospective, unicenter, double-blind, randomized controlled study | N = 100, primiparas and multiparas | N = 50 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 20 min before CS | 10 mg/kg IV for 10 min | Postpartum blood loss not clearly specified | 262.5 mL vs 404.7 mL | <0.001 | No thromboembolic events |
| N = 50 (placebo) | ||||||||||
| Xu et al., 2013 [ | China | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | N = 174 primiparas | N = 88 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 10 min before CS | 10 mg/kg IV for 5 min | Postpartum blood loss not clearly specified | 379 mL vs 441 mL | 0.02 | 2 thromboses occurred in each group. |
| Gastrointestinal side effects occurred in 10 TXA patients versus one placebo patient | ||||||||||
| N = 86 (placebo) | ||||||||||
| Senturk et al., 2013 [ | Turkey | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | N = 223, primiparas and multiparas | N = 101 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 10 min before CS | 10 mg/kg IV for 5 min | Postpartum blood loss not clearly specified | 272 mL vs 347 mL | 0.001 | No thromboembolic or gastrointestinal side effects |
| N = 122 (placebo) | ||||||||||
| Shahid A et al., 2013 [ | Pakistan | Randomized double-blind placebo controlled study | N = 74 primiparas and multiparas | N = 38 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 10 min before CS | 1 g IV for 10 min | Postpartum blood loss not clearly specified | 356 mL vs 710 mL | <0.001 | No thromboembolic side effects |
| N = 36 (placebo) | ||||||||||
| Abdel-Aleem et al., 2013 [ | Egypt | Randomized, single center, open, controlled study | N = 740 primiparas and multiparas | N = 373 (experimental) | Infusion of TXA 10 min before CS | 1 g IV for 10 min | Blood loss two hours after delivery | 241.6 mL vs 510.6 mL | <0.001 | Gastrointestinal side effects (74.3 % versus 53.1 %; |
| N = 367 (no placebo) | ||||||||||
| No thromboembolic side effects | ||||||||||
| Goswami et al., 2013 [ | India | Randomized, single center, double-blinded placebo controlled study | N = 90 primiparas and multiparas | N = 30 (experimental 1) | Infusion of TXA 20 min before CS | Experimental 1: 10 mg/kg | Postpartum blood loss, not clearly specified | 376.8 mL vs 261.2 mL vs 527.2 mL | Not reported | No thromboembolic side effects |
| N = 30 (experimental 2) | ||||||||||
| Experimental 2: 15 mg/kg | ||||||||||
| N = 30 (placebo) |
TXA Tranexamic acid, IV intravenous
Characteristics of the randomized trials that have assessed tranexamic acid for preventing postpartum hemorrhage after vaginal delivery
| Study [réf] | Country | Study design | Sample size | Study groups | Interventions | TXA Dosage/route | Primary outcome | Result | P value | Adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yang et al., (2001) [ | China | Multicenter, randomized controlled study | N = 400 primiparas | N = 94 (experimental 1) | Infusion of TXA after delivery of the fetal shoulders in the first 2 groups and infusion of AMBA in the third | 1 g IV. | Measurement of blood loss 2 h after delivery, without details about the measurement method | 243.3 mL vs 242.9 mL vs 308.1 mL vs 314.8 mL | <0.01 | Nausea (n = 2) |
| 0.5 g IV | ||||||||||
| N = 92 (experimental 2) | ||||||||||
| N = 92 (experimental 3) | 0.5 g IV | |||||||||
| N = 87 (no placebo) | placebo | |||||||||
| Gungorkuk et al., (2013) [ | Turkey | Prospective, single-center, double-blinded, randomized controlled study | N = 439 primiparas and multiparas | N = 220 (experimental) N = 219 (placebo) | Infusion of TXA at delivery of the anterior shoulder | 1 g IV for 5 min | Mean blood loss during the third and fourth stages of labor - from the end of delivery to 2 h postpartum- measured as (weight of material used – weight of materials before use)/1.05 | 261.5 mL vs 349.9 mL | <0.001 | Gastrointestinal side effects (35.9 %) |
| No thromboembolic event |
TXA Tranexamic acid, AMBA aminomethylbenzoic acid, IV intravenous