| Literature DB >> 28540468 |
Marjolein P A Brekelmans1, Kim van Ginkel2, Joost G Daams3, Barbara A Hutten4, Saskia Middeldorp5, Michiel Coppens5.
Abstract
Prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC) is used for reversal of vitamin K antagonists (VKA) in patients with bleeding complications. This study aims to assess benefits and harms of 4-factor PCC compared to fresh frozen plasma (FFP) or no treatment in VKA associated bleeding. PubMed, EMBASE and CENTRAL were searched from 1945 to August 2015. Studies reporting 4-factor PCC use for VKA associated bleeding and providing data on INR normalization, mortality or thromboembolic (TE) complications were eligible. Two authors screened titles and full articles for inclusion, extracted data, and assessed risk of bias. Mortality data were pooled using Mantel-Haenszel random effects meta-analysis. Nineteen studies were included (N = 2878); 18 cohort studies and one RCT. Six studies had good methodological quality, 9 moderate and 4 poor. Baseline INR values ranged from 2.2 to >20. The INR within 1 h after PCC administration ranged from 1.4 to 1.9, and after FFP administration from 2.2 to 12. PCC reduced the time to reach INR correction in comparison with FFP or no treatment. The observed mortality rate ranged from 0 to 43% (mean 17%) in the PCC, 4.8-54% (mean 16%) in the FFP and 23-69% (mean 51%) in the no treatment group. Meta-analysis of mortality data resulted in an OR of 0.64 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.27-1.5) for PCC versus FFP and an OR 0.41 (95% CI 0.13-1.3) for PCC versus no treatment. TE complications were observed in 0-18% (mean 2.5%) of PCC and in 6.4% of FFP recipients. Four-factor PCC is an effective and safe option in reversal of VKA bleeding events.Entities:
Keywords: Bleeding; Fresh frozen plasma; INR normalization; Mortality; Prothrombin complex concentrate; Vitamin K antagonist
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28540468 PMCID: PMC5486892 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-017-1506-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 2.300
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process
Baseline characteristics of the studies
| References | Study design | Study quality | Type of bleeding | Patients (n) | Mean age (years) | Type of PCC | Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Prospective cohort | Poor | Extracranial | 10 | 73 | Beriplex | PCC (n = 10), weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | ICH | 17 | 69 | PPSB-HT Nichiyaku | PCC (n = 17), fixed 500 or 1000 IU |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Poor | GI, hematuria | 10 | 73 | Octaplex | PCC (n = 10), INR + weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Good | ICH | 111 | 77 | Proplex T | PCC (n = 46), INR based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | GI, subcutaneous, other | 17 | 70 (median) | Beriplex | PCC (n = 17), INR + weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Good | ICH | 50 | 69 | PPSB-HT Nichiyaku | PCC (n = 22), INR based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | ICH | 141 | 78 | Octaplex | PCC (n = 141), fixed 1000 IU |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | ICH | 174 | 76 | Octaplex | PCC (n = 174), INR + weight based |
| [ | Retrospective cohort | Good | ICH | 181 | 69 | Cofact | PCC (n = 41), INR + weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | ICH, GI, other | 646 | 78 | Octaplex | PCC (n = 646), INR + weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | ICH, GI, other | 116 | 75 | Octaplex Beriplex | PCC (n = 116), INR + weight based |
| [ | Retrospective cohort | Poor | ICH | 22 | 68 | Prothromplex | PCC (n = 22), fixed dose 15 IU/kg or INR based |
| [ | RCT | Good | GI, nonvisible, ICH and musculoskeletal | 202 | 70 | Beriplex | PCC (n = 98), INR + weight based |
| [ | Retrospective cohort | Moderate | ICH and extracranial | 76 | 78 | Octaplex | PCC (n = 76), fixed 1000 IU |
| [ | Retrospective cohort | Good | ICH | 135 | 73 | Cofact | PCC (n = 100), INR + weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | ICH | 33 | – | Beriplex | PCC (n = 5), INR + weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Moderate | ICH, GI, deep muscle and other | 822 | 77 | Kanokad Octaplex | PCC (n = 509), INR + weight based |
| [ | Prospective cohort | Good | GI | 40 | 67 | Cofact | PCC (n = 20), INR + weight based |
| [ | Retrospective cohort | Poor | ICH, GI, muscle, urinary, respiratory, other | 75 | 68 | Cofact | PCC (n = 74), INR + weight based |
ICH intracranial hemorrhage, PCC prothrombin complex concentrate, INR international normalized ratio, FFP fresh frozen plasma, GI gastro-intestinal, RCT randomized controlled trial
Indication and dosing of prothrombin complex concentrate, and effect on INR
| References | Indication for PCC | PCC dose (range) | Baseline INRa | INR 0–15 mina | INR 15–30 mina | INR 1 (h)a | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Melena: 3 (30%) | 30 IU/kg | >20 (8.9 to >20) | – | 1.1 (1.0–1.3) | – | Median INR after |
| [ | ICH: 17 (100%) | 500 or 1000 IU | 2.7 (2.0 to >10) | 1.1 (0.9–1.4) | – | – | – |
| [ | GI: 5 (50%) | 14–44 IU/kg | Mean (SD): 7.1 (2.5) | Mean (SD): 1.8 (–) | Mean (SD): 1.8 (–) | Mean (SD) | – |
| [ | Traumatic ICH: 111 (100%) | NA | – | – | – | – | Time to INR <1.5 |
| [ | GI: 8 (47%) | 35–50 IU/kg | 4.8 (3.1–7.8) | – | 1.1 (1.0–1.2) | – | – |
| [ | ICH: 37 (100%) | 500–1500 IU | PCC | – | – | – | INR after PCC |
| [ | ICH: 141 (100%) | 1000 IU | 2.6 (0.6–4.6) | – | – | 1.4 (1.2–1.6) | INR <1.5 in |
| [ | ICH: 82 (47%) | 21–25 IU/kg | ICH mean (SD): | – | – | – | INR <1.5 in % patients |
| [ | ICH: 300 (46%) | 5.3–80 IU/kg | 3.8 | – | – | 1.5 (0.9–2.1) in n = 163 (25%) | Target INR < 1.5 in |
| [ | ICH: 59 (51%) | 18–29 IU/kg | 3.5 (2.6–5.4) | – | 1.4 (1.2–1.6) | – | – |
| [ | ICH: 22 (100%) | 15–25 IU/kg | Mean (SD): 4 (3) | – | – | – | INR after PCC |
| [ | GI: 127 (63%) | 25, 35 or 50 IU/kg | PCC: 3.9 (1.8–20) | – | – | – | INR ≤ 1.3 in 0.5 h |
| [ | ICH: 22 (29%) | 1000 IU | 2.8 (2.2–3.4) | – | – | – | Median INR 1.4 after 3 h |
| [ | ICH: 135 (100%) | 20–26 IU/kg | PCC: 3.0 (1.5–9.3) | – | – | – | 75% of PCC patients received adequate dose to reduce INR < 1.5 |
| [ | Traumatic ICH: 29 (88%) | 25–50 IU/kg | PCC: 3.1 (–) | – | – | – | Time to INR < 1.6 |
| [ | GI: 40 (100%) | 25–50 IU/kg | PCC: 13.2 (4.5–21) | – | – | PCC | INR after 6 h |
aMedian (range)
ICH intracranial hemorrhage, IU/kg international units per kilogram, PCC prothrombin complex concentrate, FFP fresh frozen plasma, INR international normalized ratio, GI gastro–intestinal, NA not applicable, Min minutes, N number of patients, SD standard deviation
Interventions to treat VKA related bleeding, and functional and safety outcomes
| Author | Intervention | Other interventions to stop bleeding | ICU admission | Functional outcomes | Follow-up | Mortality (n) | TE complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | – | Unknown | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | Modified Rankin scale | From admission to discharge | 3 (18%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | Response to treatmenta
| Unknown | 0 (0%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | PCC: 7.5 ± 6.3 | – | Unknown | PCC: 11 (24%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | Modified Rankin scale ≥ 3 | 30 | PCC: 1 (5%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | Modified Rankin scale | 30 | 52 (37%) | 7 (5%) |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | – | 7 | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | – | 90 | PCC: 15 (37%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | – | 15 | 135 (21%) | 4 (0.6%) |
| [ | PCC versus | Unknown | – | – | 7 | 7 (6%) | 5 (4.3%) |
| [ | PCC versus | Unknown | – | – | Unknown | 9 (43%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Packed cells | – | Hemostatic efficacy | 30 | PCC: 6 (6.1%) | PCC: 8 (7.8%) |
| [ | PCC versus | – | – | Clinical efficacy outcomes | 30 | ICH: 7 (9%) | ICH: 6 (8%) |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | – | 30 | PCC: 32 (32%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | – | 7 | 110 (13%) of all patients | 10 (1.2%) |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | PCC: n = 3 (15%) | – | Unknown | PCC: 1 (5%) | – |
| [ | PCC versus | Vitamin K | – | – | – | PCC: 10 (13%) | PCC: 0 (0%) |
aJudged by investigators
VKA vitamin K antagonist, PCC prothrombin complex concentrate, ICU intensive care unit, TE thromboembolic, FFP fresh frozen plasma, ICH intracranial hemorrhage, NS not significant, OR odds ratio, EC extracranial, I.V. intravenous, HR hazard ratio
Fig. 2Forest plot comparison of mortality in patients treated with 4F-PCC versus FFP; 4F-PCC 4-factor prothrombin complex concentrate; FFP fresh frozen plasma
Fig. 3Forest plot comparison of mortality in patients treated with 4F-PCC versus no treatment. 4F-PCC 4-factor prothrombin complex concentrate