| Literature DB >> 35160311 |
Oksana Volod1, Connor M Bunch2,3, Nuha Zackariya3, Ernest E Moore4, Hunter B Moore4, Hau C Kwaan5, Matthew D Neal6, Mahmoud D Al-Fadhl2, Shivani S Patel2, Grant Wiarda2, Hamid D Al-Fadhl2, Max L McCoy2, Anthony V Thomas3, Scott G Thomas7, Laura Gillespie8, Rashid Z Khan9, Mahmud Zamlut10, Peter Kamphues8, Dietmar Fries11, Mark M Walsh2,3,12.
Abstract
Viscoelastic hemostatic assay (VHAs) are whole blood point-of-care tests that have become an essential method for assaying hemostatic competence in liver transplantation, cardiac surgery, and most recently, trauma surgery involving hemorrhagic shock. It has taken more than three-quarters of a century of research and clinical application for this technology to become mainstream in these three clinical areas. Within the last decade, the cup and pin legacy devices, such as thromboelastography (TEG® 5000) and rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM® delta), have been supplanted not only by cartridge systems (TEG® 6S and ROTEM® sigma), but also by more portable point-of-care bedside testing iterations of these legacy devices (e.g., Sonoclot®, Quantra®, and ClotPro®). Here, the legacy and new generation VHAs are compared on the basis of their unique hemostatic parameters that define contributions of coagulation factors, fibrinogen/fibrin, platelets, and clot lysis as related to the lifespan of a clot. In conclusion, we offer a brief discussion on the meteoric adoption of VHAs across the medical and surgical specialties to address COVID-19-associated coagulopathy.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; coagulopathy; fibrinogen; hemorrhage; heparin; personalized medicine; rotational thromboelastometry; thromboelastography; thrombosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35160311 PMCID: PMC8836477 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11030860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Depictions of the physiologic TEG® 5000 (top) and ROTEM® delta (bottom) tracings. As the left side of the figure illustrates, a pin descends into a cup containing a sample of whole blood that is maintained at 37 °C. TEG® 5000 and ROTEM® delta analyzers use equivalent parameters that are labeled differently. Reaction time (R) and clotting time (CT) measure the time required for the transducer to displace by 2 mm on the y-axis. Clot formation/kinetics (K) and clot formation time (CFT) measure the initial clot strength and the time needed to displace the transducer by 20 mm, measured from when it first reached 2 mm. The α-angle measures the rate of clot formation in both the TEG® 5000 and ROTEM® delta analyzers by analyzing the angle formed between the end of the R/CT (which is called the split point) and the 20 mm point on the y-axis. The fibrinogen level is broadly correlated with both the K/CFT and α-angle. The reference ranges and definitions of each parameter are provided in Table 1. The clot amplitude at 5 and 10 min (A5 and A10) measures the amplitude at 5 min intervals after the end of R/CT. The maximum amplitude (MA) and maximum clot firmness (MCF) measure the maximum displacement and are indicative of the maximum clot strength. They also correlate with the maximum clot retraction and reflect the crosslinking of fibrin with platelets. Fibrinolysis is depicted by differing parameters in the TEG® 5000 and ROTEM® delta analyzers. The lysis at 30 and 60 min (LY30 and LY60) is a measure of the percent of decrease in amplitude at 30 and 60 min after achieving MA. The clot lysis index (CLI30 and CLI60) is the residual clot remaining 30 and 60 min after CT measured as a percentage of MCF. The maximum lysis (ML) is a measure of the percent of decrease in amplitude at the end of the run [20,23,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41].
TEG® 5000 and ROTEM® delta “legacy device” parameters and reference ranges [7,27,35,37,38,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52].
| Parameter | TEG® 5000 Analyzer 1 | ROTEM® Delta Analyzer |
|---|---|---|
| Clot initiation: the time from the test start to amplitude = 2 mm | R (Kaolin)/ACT (rTEG®) | CT |
| Clot formation and clot kinetics: the time taken to achieve a level of clot strength, amplitude = 20 mm | K | CFT |
| Angle of clot formation | α-angle | α-angle |
| Maximum clot strength | MA | MCF |
| Lysis 2 | LY30 | CLI30: 94–100% |
Abbreviations: activated clotting time (ACT); clot formation time (CFT); clot lysis index at 30 min (CLI30); clotting time (CT); extrinsic thromboelastometry (EXTEM); fibrin-based thromboelastometry (FIBTEM); intrinsic thromboelastometry (INTEM); kinetics (K); lysis at 30 min (LY30); maximum amplitude (MA); maximum clot firmness (MCF); maximum lysis (ML); RapidTEG (rTEG®); reaction time (R); rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®); thromboelastography (TEG®); TEG functional fibrinogen (MAff/CFF). 1 For the TEG® 6s and the TEG® 5000, the manufacturer (Haemonetics, Braintree, Massachusetts) makes clear that the ranges are interchangeable, but that any difference in the values is a consequence of the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) methodology used for the TEG® 6s values. Additionally, the manufacturer’s ranges are not globally prescriptive, as every laboratory must establish their own reference intervals [48]. 2 The values for clinically significant fibrinolysis vary greatly in the literature.
Detailed descriptions of specialized TEG® and ROTEM® assays [32,36,37,53,58,59,60].
| VHA | Test | Activator/Inhibitor | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| TEG | Kaolin | Kaolin, CaCl2 | Contact activation.; similar information as aPTT; isolates the intrinsic pathway. |
| rTEG® | Kaolin, TF, CaCl2 | Clotting is accelerated by activation of extrinsic TF and intrinsic kaolin pathways; contact activation; roughly analogous to an ACT; information about coagulation kinetics initiated via contact activation alone is lost. | |
| HTEG® | Kaolin, lyophilized heparinase, CaCl2 | Lyophilized heparinase neutralizes UFH; compared to kaolin TEG® to assess the heparin effect. | |
| MAff/CFF | Kaolin, TF, Abciximab, CaCl2 | Abciximab is a GPIIb/IIIa platelet receptor inhibitor that blocks the platelet contribution to clot formation; compared to kaolin TEG® to assess the fibrinogen contribution to clot strength independent of platelets. | |
| Native TEG® | Calcium | Native whole blood sample analyzed following recalcification only; impractical for clinical use given long R. | |
| ROTEM | INTEM | Ellagic acid, CaCl2 | Tests clotting activation through the intrinsic coagulation pathway, FXII, FXI, FIX, FVIII, FX, FV, FII, and fibrinogen; sensitive to the heparin effect; similar information as aPTT. |
| EXTEM | Recombinant TF, CaCl2, polybrene | Polybrene neutralizes UFH; tests clotting activation through the extrinsic coagulation pathway, FVII, FX, FV, FII, and fibrinogen. | |
| HEPTEM | Ellagic acid, CaCl2, lyophilized heparinase | Tests heparin and protamine sulfate effects in patients with high heparin concentration when compared with INTEM. | |
| FIBTEM | Recombinant TF, CaCl2, polybrene, cytochalasin D | Cytochalasin D blocks platelet activation; tests fibrinogen component contribution to clot stability; more sensitive to lysis. | |
| APTEM | Recombinant TF, CaCl2, polybrene, aprotinin/TXA | Tests fibrinolysis when performed together with the EXTEM. | |
| NATEM | CaCl2 | Native whole blood sample analyzed following recalcification only; impractical for clinical use given long CT. |
Abbreviations: activated clotting time (ACT); aprotinin thromboelastometry (APTEM); activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT); clot formation time (CFT); clotting time (CT); extrinsic thromboelastometry (EXTEM); fibrin-based thromboelastometry (FIBTEM); heparin thromboelastometry (HEPTEM); intrinsic thromboelastometry (INTEM); TEG functional fibrinogen (MAff/CFF); non-activated thromboelastometry (NATEM); reaction time (R); rapid TEG® (rTEG®); rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®); thromboelastography (TEG®); tissue factor (TF); tranexamic acid (TXA); unfractionated heparin (UFH).
Figure 2(Left): TEG® 6s. The vibration of the sample induces blood deflection; the measures change with the resonance frequency. (Right): TEG® 5000. The difference in the rotations of the cup and pin is measured via a torsional spring [64,65].
A description of the four standard VHA assay parameters and their clinical significance with the addition of the most recent tools for measuring POC clot dynamics with the TEG® 5000, TEG® 6s, ROTEM® delta/sigma, Quantra® QPlus®, and the ClotPro® systems [18,27,53,59,65,68,69,70,71,72,73,74].
| Coagulation Event | Main Contributor | TEG® 5000 | TEG® 6s | ROTEM® Delta/Sigma | Quantra® QPlus® | ClotPro® | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clot initiation | Coagulation factors | Reaction time (R), minutes | R | Clotting time (CT), seconds | CT | CT | A short R/CT/CTH time indicates a hypercoagulable state. |
| Citrated Kaolin (CK) R-time, minutes | CK-R-time, minutes | INTEM 1 CT | CT | IN-test CT | |||
| rTEG® Activated clotting time (ACT), seconds 1 | Citrated Rapid TEG (CRT) | EXTEM 1 | n/a | EX-test CT | |||
| Citrated kaolin-heparinase (CKH) 1 | CKH 1 | HEPTEM 1 CT | Heparinase Clot Time (CTH), seconds | HI-test | |||
| n/a | n/a | n/a | Clot time ratio (CTR) | n/a | |||
| Clot kinetics: amplification | Fibrinogen | Kinetic time (K), minutes | K | Clot formation time (CFT), seconds | Fibrinogen contribution to stiffness (FCS), hPA 2 | CFT | Angle reflects fibrin kinetics, including fibrin formation and cross-linking. |
| ɑ angle | ɑ angle | ɑ angle | n/a | ɑ angle | |||
| Citrated functional fibrinogen (MAff/CFF) | MAff/CFF 1 | FIBTEM 1 | n/a | FIB-test 1 | |||
| Clot stiffness: propagation | Fibrinogen, Platelets | CK Maximum amplitude (MA), mm | CK MA, mm | Maximum clot firmness (MCF), mm | Clot stiffness (CS), hPA 2 | MCF | MA, MCF, and CS reflect platelet and fibrinogen contributions to the clot stiffness and full platelet potential under maximal stimulation by thrombin. |
| rTEG® MA, mm | CRT MA, mm | EXTEM 3 MCF | Platelet contribution to clot stiffness (PCS), hPA2 | EX-test MCF 3 | |||
| Clot stability: termination | Fibrinolytic enzymes and inhibitors, Factor XIII | Lysis at 30 min after MA, (LY30), % | LY30 | Clot Lysis Index at 30/60 min after CT (CLI30/CLI60), residual % of MCF 4 | Clot Stability to Lysis (CSL), % 5 | Clot Lysis Index at 30/60 min (CLI30/CLI60), % of MCF 4 | Hyperfibrinolysis is suggested by increased clot lysis that starts within 30 min of clot formation. |
| n/a | n/a | APTEM 1 | n/a | AP-test 3 | |||
| n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | TPA 3 |
1 See Figure 1 and Figure 3 and Table 1 and Table 2 for the definition of the parameters. 2 hPa, hectopascals are units of pressure used to assay clot stiffness in Quantra®. 3 See Section 2.5.3 and Section 2.5.4 in the text and Figure 3 for definitions of the Quantra® and ClotPro® assays and parameters. 4 For the purposes of this review, in ROTEM® sigma/delta and ClotPro®, fibrinolysis is defined uniformly as the clot lysis index (CLI) 5 Measurement of Clot Stability to Lysis (CSL) is only available with the QStat® cartridge. 6 Assays for DOACs (Factor Xa inhibitors and direct thrombin inhibitors) are in various stages of approval for commercial use.
Figure 3The Quantra® plus cartridge has four channels with reagents designed to measure clot stiffness (CS) and clot time (CT). Channel 1 measures CT with kaolin activation. Channel 2 measures CT with kaolin activation and heparin neutralization. Channel 3 measures CS and tissue factor activation with heparin neutralization. Channel 4 measures CS with tissue factor activation, platelet inhibition, and heparin neutralization. Channel 4 measures the fibrinogen contribution to CS, (FCS). The platelet contribution to CS, (PCS) is equal to CS-FCS. Clot Time Ratio (CTR) = CT/CTH and indicates the level of heparinization of the patient blood sample [69,78].
Proposed trigger values for the rTEG® 5000 and ROTEM® delta [32,38,39,50,116,123,124].
| rTEG® Trigger Value | ROTEM® Trigger Value | Intervention |
|---|---|---|
| ACT > 128 s | EXTEM CT > 80 s | PCC/FFP |
| α-angle < 65° | EXTEM α-angle < 63° | fibrinogen/cryoprecipitate |
| MA < 55 mm | MCF < 45 mm | fibrinogen/cryoprecipitate/platelets |
| LY30/60 > 7.5% 1 | EXTEM | TXA/aminocaproic acid |
Abbreviations: Activated clotting time (ACT); clot amplitude at 10 min (CA10); clot lysis index 60 min after CT (CLI60); clotting time (CT); extrinsic activator thromboelastometry (EXTEM); fresh frozen plasma (FFP); fibrin-based thromboelastometry (FIBTEM); lysis at 30 min (LY30); maximum amplitude (MA); TEG functional fibrinogen (MAff/CFF); maximum clot firmness (MCF); prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC); Maximum lysis after 30/60 min (ML30/60); rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®); RapidTEG® (rTEG®); thromboelastography (TEG®); tranexamic acid (TXA). 1 The values for LY30/60, CLI30/60, and ML as markers for clinically significant fibrinolysis vary significantly in the literature.
TEG/PM® and ROTEM Platelet Analysis®: specialized assays and their clinical significance [58,148].
| VHA | Assay | Reagents | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| TEG/PM® | Kaolin TEG MA | Kaolin | MACK parameter is a proxy for the maximum potential function of the platelets. |
| Activator TEG MA | Heparin, reptilase, FXIIIa | MAActivator represents the isolated fibrin contribution to clot strength. | |
| TEG MAAA | Heparin, reptilase, FXIIIa, AA | Measures AA contribution of platelet activity to clot strength. | |
| TEG MAADP | Heparin, reptilase, FXIIIa, ADP | Measures the ADP/GPIIb/IIIa pathways’ contribution of platelet activity to clot strength. | |
| ROTEM Platelet Analysis® | ARATEM | AA | Determines GPIIb/IIIa and COX-1 receptor inhibition. |
| ADPTEM | ADP | Determines GPIIb/IIIa and ADP (P2Y12) receptor inhibition. | |
| TRAPTEM | TRAP-6 | Determines GPIIb/IIIa and thrombin (PAR-1) receptor inhibition. |
Abbreviations: Adenosine di-phosphate (ADP); Adenosine di-phosphate thromboelastometry (ADPTEM); Arachidonic acid (AA); Arachidonic acid thromboelastometry (ARATEM); Citrated kaolin (CK); Kaolin-TEG (K-TEG®); Maximum amplitude (MA); Rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM); Thrombin receptor-activating peptide-6 (TRAP-6); thrombin receptor-activating peptide thromboelastometry (TRAPTEM); thromboelastography (TEG); TEG® Platelet Mapping (TEG® P/M).