| Literature DB >> 28900890 |
S R Hamada1, C Espina2, T Guedj3, R Buaron3, A Harrois4, S Figueiredo4, J Duranteau4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is one of the most common preventable causes of in-hospital death in trauma patients surviving their injuries. We assessed the prevalence, incidence and risk factors for deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) in critically ill trauma patients, in the setting of a mature and early mechanical and pharmacological thromboprophylaxis protocol.Entities:
Keywords: Duplex ultrasound; Risk factors; Severe trauma; Thromboprophylaxis; Venous thromboembolism
Year: 2017 PMID: 28900890 PMCID: PMC5595705 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-017-0315-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Fig. 1Flow chart of the study. Patients missed because length of stay was underestimated, or because the investigators of the study were not present during the first 48 h of inclusion
Demographic and clinical characteristics of included patients
| Variable | All patients ( |
|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | |
| Age (years) | 44.6 ± 19.4 |
| Sex (male) | 72% (110) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 26.1 ± 6.5 |
| Mechanism of injury | |
| MVA | 26% (39) |
| Motorbike accident | 21% (37) |
| Fall from high | 25% (32) |
| Severity scores | |
| SOFA 24 h | 6.4 ± 4.7 |
| SAPS 2 | 34.9 ± 19.2 |
| ISS | 23.7 ± 12.7 |
| Clinical presentation | |
| Initial GCS | 12.4 ± 3.9 |
| Vasopressor on day 1 | 22% (34) |
| RAP score | 11.1 ± 5.6 |
| ICU length of stay (days) | 7 [ |
| Hospital length of stay (days) | 26.5 ± 22. 9 |
| Initiation of thromboprophylaxis (days) | 2 ± 1 |
| Mortality | 11.8% (18) |
Data expressed as mean ± SD or median [quartile 1; 3] according to distribution
Categorical variables expressed as percentage (n)
BMI body mass index, MVA motor vehicle accident, ICU intensive care unit, GCS Glasgow Coma Score, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment Score, SAPS 2 Simplified Acute Physiology Score 2, ISS Injury Severity Score, RAP score Risk Assessment Profile
Fig. 2Kaplan–Meier curve of cumulative thromboembolic events in the cohort. We decided to include all patients presenting even with early diagnosis of DVT (within 48 h) as none of them had known risk factors (past medical history of DVT, or family history, cancer, obesity), nor any symptoms identified before admission. They were severely injured patients and had either extended vehicle extrication time or prolonged surgery with potentially compression mechanism
Fig. 3Anatomical situation of DVT diagnosed with duplex US examination (n = 59 in 45 patients). Femoral (n = 27), internal jugular (n = 29), subclavian (n = 2), popliteal (n = 1), external iliac (n = 1)
Relation between central venous catheter characteristics and DVT
| Vein | Incidence of DVT (1000 catheter-days) | CVC ( | DVT ( | No. of days of catheterization | Length of catheterization (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Femoral | 67.7 | 126/119 | 22 | 325 | 2 [1; 3] |
| I. jugular | 47.5 | 53/47 | 21 | 442 | 8 [4.3; 12] |
| Subclavian | 35.7 | 5/5 | 1 | 28 | 6 [4.8; 7.3] |
No CVC (n = 29), 1 CVC (n = 73), 2 CVC (42), 3 CVC (n = 9)
Data expressed as median [quartile 1; 3]
I. Jugular internal jugular catheter, DVT/1000 catheter-days number of event/number of days of catheterization × 1000, DVT deep venous thrombosis, CVC central venous catheter
Univariate analysis of patient characteristics according to the occurrence of thromboembolic events
| Variables | TEE+ ( | TEE− ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | |||
| Age (years) | 46.8 ± 18.4 | 43.6 ± 19.8 | 0.3505 |
| Sex (male) | 80.9% (38) | 67.9% (72) | 0.6140 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 26.6 ± 7.1 | 25.9 ± 6.2 | 0.5571 |
| History of cancer | 0% (0) | 6 (5.7%) | 0.2253 |
| History of DVT | 0% (0) | 0% (0) | – |
| Injuries grading | |||
| Initial GCS ≤ 8 | 29.8% (14) | 17.9% (19) | 0.1519 |
| AIS thorax > 2 | 46.8% (22) | 36.8% (39) | 0.3230 |
| AIS head > 2 | 40.4% (19) | 43.4% (46) | 0.8684 |
| AIS abdomen > 2 | 27.6% (13) | 17.9% (19) | 0.2500 |
| Pelvic fracture | 29.8% (14) | 12.3% (13) | 0.0167 |
| Lower limbs fracture | 25.5% (12) | 28.3% (30) | 0.8746 |
| Medullar injury | 25.53% (12) | 9.43% (10) | 0.0179 |
| Spine fracture | 42.6% (20) | 24.5% (26) | 0.0402 |
| Scores | |||
| SAPS II | 44.9 [38.7; 50.7] | 30.4 [27.4; 34.1] | 0.0001 |
| ISS | 28.9 [20; 34] | 21.4 [13; 29] | 0.0006 |
| SOFA 24 h | 8.3 [5; 11] | 5.6 [1; 9.5] | 0.0007 |
| RAP score > 5 | 95.7% (45) | 83% (88) | 0.0582 |
| RAP score > 10 | 70.2% (33) | 39.6% (42) | 0.0009 |
| Clinical status | |||
| SAP min (mmHg) | 99 ± 28 | 111 ± 25 | 0.0083 |
| Vasopressors | 31.9% (15) | 18.1% (19) | 0.0594 |
| Surgery > 2 h | 46.8% (22) | 30.2% (32) | 0.0782 |
| Central venous catheter | 95.7% (45) | 74.5% (79) | 0.0041 |
| Initial transfusion treatment (day 1) | |||
| Transfusion > 4 RBC in 6 h | 29.8% (14) | 13.2% (14) | 0.0264 |
| Tranexamic acid | 36.2% (17) | 17.9% (19) | 0.0246 |
| Fibrinogen | 31.9% (15) | 13.2% (14) | 0.0124 |
| Thromboprophylactic procedure | |||
| Compression stockings (absent) | 8.5% (4) | 9.5% (10) | 0.9769 |
| Pneumatic intermittent compression (no) | 14.9% (7) | 18.1% (19) | 0.8877 |
| Time before initiation of antithrombotic chemoprophylaxis | 2 [1; 2] | 1 [1; 2] | 0.4533 |
| Outcome | |||
| ICU length of stay | 18 [7; 32] | 5.5 [3; 11] | <0.0001 |
| Hospital length of stay | 28 [15; 43] | 17 [11; 28] | 0.0027 |
| Mortality | 10.6% (5) | 10.4% (11) | 0.5976 |
| Binarized characteristics | |||
| ISS ≥ 16 | 87.2% (41) | 69.6% (73) | 0.0333 |
| SAPS II ≥ 30 | 76.6% (36) | 47.6% (49) | 0.0016 |
| SOFA 24 ≥ 5 | 80.9% (38) | 50.9% (54) | 0.0009 |
| BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | 23.9% (11) | 24.7% (21) | 1 |
| Age ≥ 50 years | 40.4% (19) | 34.6% (36) | 0.614 |
| SAP min ≤ 80 mmHg | 26.1 (12) | 7.8% (8) | 0.0061 |
| GCS ≤ 8 | 25.5% (12) | 18.9% (20) | 0.4718 |
Continuous data are expressed as mean ± SD or median [quartile 1; 3] according to their distribution. Categorical data are expressed as percentage (n)
SAPS II Simplified Acute Physiology Score, SOFA à 24 h Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, AIS Abbreviated Injury Score, ISS Injury Severity Score, RAP Risk Assessment Profile, DVT deep venous thrombosis, BMI body mass index, GCS Glasgow Coma Score, RBC red blood cells, systolic arterial pressure minimal systolic arterial pressure recorded during transport, ICU intensive care unit