| Literature DB >> 33048195 |
K Baksaas-Aasen1, L S Gall2, J Stensballe3, N P Juffermans4, N Curry5, M Maegele6, A Brooks7, C Rourke2, S Gillespie2, J Murphy8, R Maroni8, P Vulliamy2, H H Henriksen3, K Holst Pedersen3, K M Kolstadbraaten1, M R Wirtz4, D J B Kleinveld4, N Schäfer6, S Chinna7, R A Davenport2, P A Naess1, J C Goslings4, S Eaglestone2, S Stanworth5,9, P I Johansson3, C Gaarder1, K Brohi10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Contemporary trauma resuscitation prioritizes control of bleeding and uses major haemorrhage protocols (MHPs) to prevent and treat coagulopathy. We aimed to determine whether augmenting MHPs with Viscoelastic Haemostatic Assays (VHA) would improve outcomes compared to Conventional Coagulation Tests (CCTs).Entities:
Keywords: Coagulopathy; Haemorrhage; Thrombelastography; Thromboelastometry; Trauma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33048195 PMCID: PMC7550843 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-06266-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1CONSORT diagram. CCT conventional coagulation test, VHA Viscoelastic Haemostatic Assay, TBI traumatic brain injury
Demographics, injuries and admission characteristics and initial therapies (intention-to-treat population)
| CCT ( | VHA ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Median age (IQR) | 43 (28–59), | 40 (26–54), |
| Male sex – no. (%) | 159/194 (82%) | 145/198 (73%) |
| Prior oral anticoagulation – no. (%) | 15/192 (8%) | 12/198 (6%) |
| Injury caused by blunt trauma alone^ – no. (%) | 130/194 (67%) | 133/198 (66%) |
| Median Injury Severity Score (IQR) | 26 (16–35), | 26 (17–37), |
| Severe TBI (AIS Head > 3) – no. (%) | 35/191 (18%) | 39/201 (20%) |
| Median time from injury to admission (IQR) – min | 67 (42–98), | 70 (48–95), |
| Median heart rate (IQR) – beats/min | 105 (82–123), | 103 (87–127), |
| Median systolic blood pressure (IQR) – mmHg | 90 (74–110), | 95 (73–120), |
| Median Glasgow Coma Scale score (IQR) | 13 (3–15), | 12 (3–15), |
| Patients with PTr > 1.2 – no. (%) | 58/181 (32%) | 44/175 (25%) |
| Median base deficit (IQR) – mEq/L | 7.2 (4.2–13), | 8.2 (4.4–12.8), |
| Median lactate (IQR) – mEq/L | 4.4 (2.8–8.2), | 4.5 (2.9–8), |
| Median fibrinogen level (IQR) – g/L | 2.0 (1.4–2.4), | 1.9 (1.5–2.4), |
| Received tranexamic acid bolus—no. (%) | 190/193 (98%) | 187/200 (94%) |
| Median units of RBCs (IQR) | 2 (1–4), | 2 (1–4), |
| Median units of FFP/Octaplasma (IQR) | 0 (0–2), | 0 (0–2), |
| Median equivalent dose of fibrinogen (IQR) – g | 0 (0–0), | 0 (0–0), |
| Median units of Platelets (IQR) | 0 (0–0), | 0 (0–0), |
CCT conventional coagulation test, VHA viscoelastic haemostatic assay, IQR interquartile range, TBI traumatic brain injury, AIS abbreviated injury scale, PTr prothrombin time ratio, RBC red blood cell, FFP fresh frozen plasma
^The other categorisations used for a type of trauma were: penetrating; or blunt and penetrating combined
Fig. 2Primary outcome (alive and free of massive transfusion at 24 h) in pre-specified subgroups. Odds ratios for the primary outcome (alive and free of massive transfusion at 24 h) in the subgroups of coagulopathic patients at baseline (defined as PTr > 1.2), patients with severe TBI, patients with prior oral anticoagulants, the Per Protocol and Intention-To-Treat (Overall) populations. Odds ratios were calculated using the VHA arm as the exposed group. The solid black line indicates an odds ratio of 1, equivalent to no difference between study groups. The vertical red dashed line indicates the overall odds ratio for the ITT population. Subgroup allocation criteria were missing for some patients, so some subgroups do not add up to 396 patients. In particular, the following patients had missing data in their records: 40 did not have a PTr value at baseline, 9 did not have a TBI score, 6 did not have a record for prior oral anticoagulants. Post-hoc analysis: the p-values for the interaction between study arm and each subgroup were calculated using a logistic regression with “being alive and free of massive transfusion at 24 h” as the outcome. CI confidence interval, CCT conventional coagulation test, VHA viscoelastic haemostatic assay, PTr prothrombin time ratio, TBI traumatic brain injury, ITT intention-to-treat
Secondary outcomes for the intention-to-treat population
| CCT ( | VHA ( | Odds ratio (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mortality at 6 h—no. (%) | 22/195 (11%) | 22/201 (11%) | 0.97 (0.52–1.80) | 0.915 |
| Mortality at 24 h—no. (%) | 33/195 (17%) | 29/201 (14%) | 0.83 (0.48–1.42) | 0.495 |
| Mortality at 28 days—no. (%) | 55/194 (28%) | 50/201 (25%) | 0.84 (0.54–1.31) | 0.435 |
| Mortality at 90 days—no. (%) | 56/177 (31%) | 53/179 (29%) | 0.91 (0.58–1.42) | 0.678 |
| Death from exsanguination—no. (%) | 17/56 (30%) | 13/51 (25%) | 0.78 (0.34–1.82) | 0.576 |
| Died before haemostasis—no. (%) | 24/54 (44%) | 19/50 (38%) | 0.77 (0.35–1.67) | 0.505 |
| Median time to haemostasis^ (IQR)—mins | 122 (80–185), | 125 (77–185), | 0.929 | |
| PTr > 1.2 at haemostasis^—no. (%) | 17/151 (11%) | 21/142 (15%) | 1.37 (0.70–2.69) | 0.369 |
| Massive transfusion at 24 h—no. (%) | 55/195 (28%) | 53/201 (26%) | 0.91 (0.59–1.42) | 0.682 |
| Patients with symptomatic TE^^—no. (%) | 27/195 (14%) | 17/201 (9%) | 0.57 (0.31–1.08) | 0.088 |
| Patients with MODS^^^—no. (%) | 134/159 (84%) | 141/164 (86%) | 1.14 (0.62–2.10) | 0.668 |
| Median 28-day ventilator-free days (IQR) | 20 (0–26), | 17 (0–25), | 0.422 | |
| Median 28-day ICU-free days (IQR) | 15 (0–23), | 13 (0–23), | 0.691 | |
| Median hospital LOS in survivors (IQR) | 24 (10–42), | 29 (13–49), | 0.147 | |
| Median EQ-5D^^^^ index at discharge/28 days (IQR) | 49 (25–60), | 40 (28–60), | 0.672 | |
| Median EQ-5D^^^^ index at 90 days (IQR) | 60 (40–70), | 53 (40–70), | 0.718 |
Proportions were calculated excluding any missing records
CCT conventional coagulation test, VHA viscoelastic haemostatic assay, CI confidence interval, PTr prothrombin time ratio, TE thromboembolic events, MODS multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, ICU intensive care unit, LOS length of stay
^Patients with haemostasis (CCT: n = n = 170, VHA: n = 178)
^^Myocardial infarction and Embolic strokes are included in thromboembolic events
^^^ Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS) defined as having a Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score of 6 or more on a day
^^^^EQ-5D is a questionnaire by EuroQol used as a measure of overall health status
Fig. 3Survival curves at 24 h and 90 days. Survival curves with 95% confidence intervals at 24 h and 90 days for the Intention-To-Treat (ITT) population. Blue: CCT-guided and Red: VHA-guided. The p values shown are the result of the log-rank test. 4 patients in the ITT population had missing date/time of events and were therefore not included in the survival curve. CCT conventional coagulation test, VHA viscoelastic haemostatic assay
Distribution of serious adverse events (SAEs) and causes of death
| SAE description^ | CCT | VHA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Events | Patients | Events | Patients | |
| Infection | 34 (34%) | 30 (32%) | 35 (31%) | 29 (29%) |
| Thromboembolic^^ | 24 (24%) | 22 (24%) | 16 (14%) | 15 (15%) |
| Ischemic | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 6 (5%) | 6 (6%) |
| Organ failure | 5 (5%) | 5 (5%) | 9 (8%) | 9 (9%) |
| Acute kidney injury | 6 (6%) | 6 (6%) | 6 (5%) | 6 (6%) |
| Acute lung injury | 6 (6%) | 5 (5%) | 12 (11%) | 8 (8%) |
| New onset major bleeding | 9 (9%) | 9 (10%) | 6 (5%) | 6 (6%) |
| Cardiac | 6 (6%) | 6 (6%) | 10 (9%) | 10 (10%) |
| Neurological | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (4%) | 4 (4%) |
| Other | 11 (11%) | 10 (11%) | 8 (7%) | 8 (8%) |
| Total | 101 (100%) | 93 (100%) | 112 (100%) | 101 (100%) |
Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) were defined as any adverse event, adverse transfusion reaction or unexpected adverse transfusion reaction that resulted in death, was life-threatening, required hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, resulted in persistent or significant disability or incapacity, resulted in a congenital anomaly/birth defect or other medically significant event
^In the event field, SAEs experienced multiple times by the same patient are included in the count. In the patients field, patients experiencing multiple SAEs of the same type are included only once per type of SAE
^^Myocardial infarction and embolic stroke are included in thromboembolic SAEs
| When standard of care is delivered with empiric balanced haemostatic therapy and intensive conventional coagulation testing, viscoelastic haemostatic assays did not improve clinical outcomes in the intention to treat cohort. |