| Literature DB >> 27267942 |
Pierre Bouzat1,2,3, Clotilde Schilte4,5, Marc Vinclair4, Pauline Manhes4, Julien Brun4, Jean-Luc Bosson6, Jean-François Payen4,5,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Elevated serum blood lactate is an indicator of on-going bleeding in severe trauma patients. Point-of-care (POC) capillary lactate measurement devices may be useful to rapidly assess lactate concentration at the bedside. The aim of this study was to test the diagnostic performance of capillary lactate to predict significant transfusion in normotensive trauma patients.Entities:
Keywords: Lactate; Point-of-care; Severe trauma; Transfusion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27267942 PMCID: PMC4896037 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0272-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Characteristics of the global population (n = 120 patients)
| Variable | Value |
|---|---|
| Age, years | 37 [27–56] |
| Male, | 102 (85 %) |
| Blunt, | 113 (94 %) |
| Prehospital SBP, mmHg | 116 [100–131] |
| Prehospital HR, beats/min | 80 [71–94] |
| Prehospital Shock index, | |
| < 0.9 | 81 (76 %) |
| > 0.9 | 26 (24 %) |
| Prehospital Crystalloids, ml | 250 [0–500] |
| Prehospital Colloids, ml | 0 [0–0] |
| Capillary lactate | 3.7 [2.3–5.6] |
| Blood lactate* | 1.6 [1.1–2.7] |
| Capillary hemoglobin, g/dl | 13.6 [12.5–14.9] |
| Emergency surgery, | 28 (23 %) |
| Embolization, | 4 (3 %) |
| ISS | 19 [10–26] |
| Length of stay in ICU, | 7 [3–14] |
| Intra-hospital mortality, | 2 (2 %) |
| Transfusion ≥ 4 RBC within 48 h, | 12 (10 %) |
Values are median [25th–75th percentiles]
RBC packed red Blood Cell; SBP systolic blood pressure, HR heart rate, ICU intensive care unit, ISS injury severity score
*n = 60 patients
Fig. 1Receiver operating characteristic curves of capillary lactate on admission and prehospital shock index to predict a significant transfusion in the cohort (n = 120 patients)
Fig. 2Agreement between the capillary lactate measurement device and serum blood lactate concentration via the Bland & Altman representation (n = 60 patients). Central dash-line represents the linear bias between the two methods. Upper and lower black lines represent the 95 % prediction limits for the blood lactate given the value by the capillary method
Univariate analysis between patients with capillary lactate < 3.5 mmol/l (n = 58 patients) versus patients with capillary lactate ≥ 3.5 mmol/l (n = 62 patients)
| Capillary lactate <3.5 mmol/l | Capillary lactate ≥3.5 mmol/l |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||
| Age, years | 34.7 [26.3–55.1] | 38 [28.2–56.5] | 0.61 |
| Male, | 50 (86 %) | 52 (84 %) | 0.72 |
| Blunt trauma, | 51 (88 %) | 60 (97 %) | 0.47 |
| Prehospital SBP, mmHg | 120 [100–136] | 111 [100–129] | |
| Prehospital HR, beats/min | 77 [69–86] | 82 [75–100] | 0.26 |
| Prehospital Shock index, | 0.9 | ||
| < 0.9 | 42 (72 %) | 42 (68 %) |
|
| > 0.9 | 16 (28 %) | 20 (32 %) | |
| Prehospital Crystalloid, ml | 250 [0–500] | 250 [0–500] | |
| Prehospital Colloid, ml | 0 [0–0] | 0 [0–0] | |
| Capillary lactate | 2.2 [1.4–2.6] | 5.6 [4.5–7.2] |
|
| Blood lactate* | 1.45 [1–1.9] | 2.1 [1.4–3.2] |
|
| Capillary haemoglobin, g/dl | 13.9 [13.0–15.0] | 13.1 [11.7–14.5] |
|
| Emergency surgery, | 10 (17.2 %) | 18 (29 %) | 0.13 |
| Embolization, | 0/58 (0 %) | 4/62 (6.5 %) |
|
| ISS | 19 [10–26] | 18 [10–26] | 0.9 |
| Length of stay in ICU, | 7 [3–19] | 6.5 [3.3–12.8] |
|
| In-hospital mortality, | 1 (2 %) | 1 (2 %) | 0.58 |
| Transfusion ≥4 RBC first 48 h, | 0 (0 %) | 12 (19 %) | 0.96 |
Values are median [25th–75th percentiles]
RBC packed Red Blood Cell, SBP systolic blood pressure, HR heart rate, ICU intensive care unit, ISS injury severity score. P value < 0.05 are indicated in bold
*n = 60 patients
Fig. 3Allocation of packed red blood cells (RBC) units across individual patients according to the category of capillary lactate concentration on admission (< 3.5 mmol/l vs. ≥ 3.5 mmol/l). The dash-line represents the cut-off for significant transfusion (four RBCs). * p < 0.01