| Literature DB >> 28432428 |
Ingrid Pabinger1, Dietmar Fries2, Herbert Schöchl3,4, Werner Streif5, Wolfgang Toller6.
Abstract
Uncontrolled massive bleeding with subsequent derangement of the coagulation system is a major challenge in the management of both surgical and seriously injured patients. Under physiological conditions activators and inhibitors of coagulation regulate the sensitive balance between clot formation and fibrinolysis. In some cases, excessive and diffuse bleeding is caused by systemic activation of fibrinolysis, i. e. hyperfibrinolysis (HF). Uncontrolled HF is associated with a high mortality. Polytrauma patients and those undergoing surgical procedures involving organs rich in plasminogen proactivators (e. g. liver, kidney, pancreas, uterus and prostate gland) are at a high risk for HF. Antifibrinolytics, such as tranexamic acid (TXA) are used for prophylaxis and treatment of bleeding caused by a local or generalized HF as well as other hemorrhagic conditions. TXA is a synthetic lysine analogue that has been available in Austria since 1966. TXA is of utmost importance in the prevention and treatment of traumatic and perioperative bleeding due to the resulting reduction in perioperative blood loss and blood transfusion requirements. The following article presents the different fields of application of TXA with particular respect to indications and dosages, based on a literature search and on current guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: Bleeding; Hyperfibrinolysis; Surgery; Tranexamic acid; Trauma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28432428 PMCID: PMC5429347 DOI: 10.1007/s00508-017-1194-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wien Klin Wochenschr ISSN: 0043-5325 Impact factor: 1.704
Therapeutic indications for tranexamic acid [27]
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| Prophylaxis and treatment of bleeding due to a local or systemic hyperfibrinolysis in adults and children over the age of 1 year |
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| Ears, nose and throat (ENT) surgery (adenoidectomy, tonsillectomy, dental extractions) |
| Gynecological surgery or obstetric hemorrhage |
| Abdominal and thoracic surgery and other major surgery, e. g. cardiac surgery |
| As antidote in bleeding requiring immediate treatment while on fibrinolytic treatment |
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| Hypermenorrhea (menorrhagia) |
| Prostatectomy |
| Epistaxis |
| Conisation of the cervix |
| Prophylaxis of recurrent bleeding in traumatic hyphema |
| Dental extraction and other interventions in ENT area in patients with hereditary coagulopathies |
| Mucosal bleeding in patients with coagulopathies |
| Hereditary angioneurotic edema |
Clinically relevant adverse effects of tranexamic acid (expert opinions) [27]
| Gastrointestinal disturbances (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea) |
| Drop of blood pressure/dizziness following a too fast intravenous administration |
| Incidental allergic skin reactions |
| Infrequent temporal vision impairment |
| Convulsions |
Contraindications of tranexamic acid [27]
| Hypersensitivity to TXA |
| Early pregnancy, in late pregnancy only when vitally indicated |
| Disturbances of color vision |
| Massive bleeding in the upper urinary tract (risk of ureter obstruction due to clot) |
| Acute venous or arterial thrombosis |
| Severe renal impairment |
| History of convulsions |
| Intrathecal and intraventricular injection, intracerebral administration (risk of cerebral edema and convulsions) |
| Diseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) without severe hemorrhage |
Dosage and administration of tranexamic acid
| According to the SmPC the following dosage guidelines apply to adults [ |
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Fig. 1Mortality rate by percent fibrinolysis. Rate of amplitude reduction 30 minutes after the maximum amplitude (LY30) is reached and its correlation to mortality. HF was defined as more than 7.5% amplitude reduction 30 minutes after maximal amplitude (LY30). At an LY30 of 3% or less, 30-day mortality was 9%. However, once the LY30 extended to more than 3%, mortality increased to 20%. Large increases in mortality were also seen at LY30’s of greater than 4% (35%), greater than 5% (58%), and greater than 15% (81%). Reproduced with permission from [6]
Fig. 2Cumulative survival of military TXA administration in the overall cohort and in patients with massive transfusion from the Trauma Emergency Resuscitation (MATTERs) Study. (Data from Morrison et al. [12])
PPH: results of clinical studies with tranexamic acid in obstetrics
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| Method | Results |
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| Dulcoy-Bouthers et al. [ | 144 | RCT, double-blind | Bleeding duration ↓ |
| Yang et al. [ | 400 | RCT (prospective, double-blind) | Total blood loss ↓ |
| Gungorduk et al. [ | 454 | RCT | Blood loss ↓ |
| Bouet et al. [ | 289 | Retrospective single centre analysis of policy before and after use of high dose TXA 10 g | No difference in blood loss |
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| Goswami et al. [ | 90 | RCT (prospective, double-blind) | Total blood loss in both TXA groups ↓ |
| Gai et al. [ | 180 | RCT (multi centre, prospective, randomized controlled) | Blood loss until 2 h after delivery ↓ |
| Abdel Aleem et al. [ | 740 | RCT (Single centre, open, controlled) | Blood loss until 2 h after delivery ↓ |
| Sekhavat et al. [ | 90 | RCT (prospective, randomized, double-blind) | Blood loss until 2 h after delivery ↓ |
| Halder et al. [ | 100 | Case-control study | Blood loss until 2 days postpartum ↓ |
| Movafegh et al. [ | 100 | RCT (prospective, double-blind, randomized, controlled) | Blood loss until 2 h postpartum ↓ |
| Sentürk et al. [ | 223 | RCT (prospective, double-blind, placebo controlled) | Intra- and postoperative blood loss ↓ |
| Xu et al. [ | 174 | Randomized case-control study | Blood loss until 2 h postpartum ↓ |
| Gohel et al. [ | 100 | Randomized, prospective case-control study | Blood loss until 2 h postpartum ↓ |
| Shahid et al. [ | 74 | RCT (prospective, randomized, double-blind) | Intraoperative blood loss ↓ |
| Gungorduk et al. [ | 660 | RCT (prospective, double-blind, placebo controlled) | Intraoperative blood loss ↓ |
↓ = difference to placebo significant
CS cesarean section, RCT randomized clinical trial, PPH postpartum hemorrhage, PAMBA para-aminomethylbenzoic acid, TXA tranexamic acid
Dosing of tranexamic acid in children according to current guidelines (modified according to [108, 109])
| Children and adolescents | Bolus | Maintenance dose from day 0 | |
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| <50 kg | Oral | 15–25 mg/kg on preceding evening or 1.5–2× dosage on day of surgery | 15–25 mg/kg 3–4× daily |
| Intravenous | 10–15 mg/kg on day of surgery | 10–15 mg/kg 3× daily | |
| ≥50 kg | Oral | 1.0–1.5 g on preceding evening or 1.5–2× dosage on day of surgery | 1.0–1.5 g 3–4× daily |
| Intravenous | 0.5–1.0 g on day of surgery | 0.5–1.0 g 3× daily |
Recognized indications of tranexamic acid in pediatrics (expert opinion)
| Excessive fibrinolysis (e. g. liver transplantation, medication induced) |
| Adjuvant as hemostatic agent, in hemophilia and von Willebrand disease (e. g. dentistry, not in renal bleeding!) |
| Mucosal bleeding (topicala, oral, intravenous), exception: bleeding of the upper urinary tract |
| Primary and adjuvant in hereditary thrombopathies/thrombopenia [ |
| PAI 1 deficiency, α2-plasmin inhibitor deficiency, hereditary telangiectasia |
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aTopical use: TXA (solution for injection) is locally applied without dilution or diluted with NaCl 0.9%; when applied in the mouth the swallowed amount should be added to the total dosage. The topical application is not included in the SmPC