| Literature DB >> 35887803 |
Christiaan N Mamczak1, Jacob Speybroeck2, John E Stillson3, Joseph Dynako4, Andres Piscoya5, Ethan E Peck6, Michael Aboukhaled6, Emily Cancel6, Michael McDonald7, Diego Garcia6, John Lovejoy8, Stephanie Lubin9, Robert Stanton10, Matthew E Kutcher11.
Abstract
The application of viscoelastic hemostatic assays (VHAs) (e.g., thromboelastography (TEG) and rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM)) in orthopedics is in its relative infancy when compared with other surgical fields. Fortunately, several recent studies describe the emerging use of VHAs to quickly and reliably analyze the real-time coagulation and fibrinolytic status in both orthopedic trauma and elective orthopedic surgery. Trauma-induced coagulopathy-a spectrum of abnormal coagulation phenotypes including clotting factor depletion, inadequate thrombin generation, platelet dysfunction, and dysregulated fibrinolysis-remains a potentially fatal complication in severely injured and/or hemorrhaging patients whose timely diagnosis and management are aided by the use of VHAs. Furthermore, VHAs are an invaluable compliment to common coagulation tests by facilitating the detection of hypercoagulable states commonly associated with orthopedic injury and postoperative status. The use of VHAs to identify hypercoagulability allows for an accurate venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk assessment and monitoring of VTE prophylaxis. Until now, the data have been insufficient to permit an individualized approach with regard to dosing and duration for VTE thromboprophylaxis. By incorporating VHAs into routine practice, orthopedic surgeons will be better equipped to diagnose and treat the complete spectrum of coagulation abnormalities faced by orthopedic patients. This work serves as an educational primer and up-to-date review of the current literature on the use of VHAs in orthopedic surgery.Entities:
Keywords: blood coagulation tests; blood transfusion; orthopedics; rotational thromboelastometry; thromboelastography; trauma; venous thromboembolism
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887803 PMCID: PMC9323142 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11144029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Simplified algorithm of blood component therapy and hemostatic adjuncts based on the shovel analogy for viscoelastic hemostatic assays [8,14].
| ROTEM/TEG Parameter Abnormality | Intervention |
|---|---|
| Prolonged CT/R, | Fresh frozen plasma and/or multifactor concentrates (e.g., prothrombin complex concentrate) |
| Decreased CT/R | Prophylactic anticoagulation |
| Decreased alpha angle, | Cryoprecipitate/fibrinogen concentrate |
| Decreased MCF/MA, | Platelets/cryoprecipitate/fibrinogen concentrate |
| Increased MCF/MA | Prophylactic anticoagulation and/or antiplatelet agents |
| Increased CLI60/LY30, “Sharp point of blade” | Antifibrinolytic (e.g., tranexamic acid) |
Abbreviations: clot lysis index at 60 min (CLI60); clotting time (CT); lysis at 30 min (LY30); maximum amplitude (MA); maximum clot firmness (MCF); reaction time (R).
Figure 1A 0.36 mL citrated sample of whole blood is placed into a heated cup maintained at 37 °C in which a pin is suspended. In TEG, the cup oscillates while the pin is stationary; in ROTEM, the pin oscillates while the cup remains stationary. In both assays, citrate anticoagulation is reversed with calcium, and a coagulation activation reagent is added; as the blood coagulates, force is detected by the pin and transmitted to an electrical transducer, producing a graphical output that represents clot dynamics over time. Reaction time (R) and clotting time (CT) represent the amount of time until the tracing reaches 2 mm in amplitude. Kinetics (K) and clot formation time (CFT) represent the amount of time between 2 mm of amplitude and when the tracing reaches 20 mm in amplitude. The α-angle is used in both TEG and ROTEM; it represents the angle between the horizontal line and the line between clot initiation and 20 mm amplitude. Maximum amplitude (MA) and maximum clot firmness (MCF) represent the maximum amplitude that the tracing reaches. Lysis at 30 min (LY30) represents the percentage decrease in amplitude 30 min after reaching MA. Clot lysis index (CLI30) represents the percentage of amplitude remaining 30 min after reaching MA. Maximum lysis (ML) refers to the percentage decrease in amplitude relative to the MCF at the end of the run.
Figure 2Shovel analogy of ROTEM/TEG tracings. The first shovel, shown with a normal handle length and moderately wide shovel blade with a slight narrowing of the tip of the blade, represents physiological hemostasis with normal CT/R, alpha angle, MCF/MA, and CLI60/LY30. The second ROTEM/TEG shovel tracing with a very short handle and wide blade with very little tapering of the tip of the blade depicts a tracing with a decreased CT/R and a wide alpha angle, CT/MA, and increased width of the CLI60 with very low LY30. This shovel tracing is indicative of a hypercoagulable/fibrinolytic shutdown phenotype. The third ROTEM/TEG shovel tracing depicts a tracing with a prolonged CT/R, narrow alpha angle, a narrow MCF/MA, and increased lysis represented by the decreased width of CLI60 and the pointed and increased LY30; these parameters are indicative of a hypocoagulopathic/hyperfibrinolytic phenotype. See Table 1 for a treatment algorithm based on this shovel analogy. Abbreviations: clot lysis index at 30/60 min (CLI30/CLI60); clotting time (CT); lysis at 30 min (LY30); maximum amplitude (MA); reaction time (R); rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM); thromboelastography (TEG).
Summary of the literature pertaining to viscoelastic hemostatic assays applied for the treatment of patients with pelvic fractures.
| First Author | Study Design | No. of Patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bostian et al., 2020 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 141 pelvic and/or acetabular fractures | Increased LY30 on index TEG significantly correlated with mortality, blood loss, and pRBCs transfused. |
| Kane et al., 2015 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 131 pelvic and/or acetabular fractures | Index TEG R >6 was an independent predictor of mortality (13/25, 52% death rate). Forty-one patients had an abnormal R value at index presentation. |
| Mamczak et al., 2016 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 40 pelvic and/or acetabular fractures | TEG/PM-guided resuscitation yielded an average transfusion ratio of 2.5:1:2.8 pRBC:FFP:platelets. TEG may optimize resuscitation over standard 1:1:1 fixed ratio guidelines. |
| Nelson et al., 2020 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 210 severe pelvic fractures | At index presentation, 59% of patients demonstrated fibrinolytic shutdown on rTEG. VTE incidence was 11%, and fibrinolysis shutdown on rTEG at index did not predict VTE. |
Abbreviations: fresh frozen plasma (FFP); lysis at 30 min (LY30); packed red blood cell (pRBC); rapid thromboelastography (rTEG); thromboelastography (TEG); thromboelastography with platelet mapping (TEG/PM); venous thromboembolism (VTE).
Summary of the literature pertaining to viscoelastic hemostatic assays applied for the treatment of patients with long bone fractures.
| First Author | Study Design | No. of Patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wilson et al., 2001 [ | Prospective Cohort | 250 femoral neck fractures | Patients who developed postoperative DVT demonstrated significantly greater hypercoagulability by TEG on PODs 1–7 compared to those who did not develop DVT. |
| Liu et al., 2016 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 40 fractures (13 humerus and 27 femur) in adults >60 years old, compared to 40 age-matched controls | Prior to surgery and 4 h post injury, aged fracture patients showed significant hypercoagulability on TEG by decreased K and R and increased alpha angle, MA, and CI compared to controls. TEG parameters correlated well with CCTs. |
Abbreviations: common coagulation test (CCT); coagulation index (CI); deep vein thrombosis (DVT); clot kinetics (K); maximum amplitude (MA); postoperative day (POD); reaction time (R); thromboelastography (TEG).
Summary of the literature pertaining to viscoelastic hemostatic assay-guided goal-directed therapy for orthopedic patients.
| First Author | Study Design | No. of Patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meyer et al., 2014 [ | Prospective Cohort | 182 trauma patients | A5 and A10 may be better predictors of TIC and need for goal-directed transfusion compared to MA/MCF in severely injured trauma patients. |
| Laursen et al., 2018 [ | Prospective Cohort | 404 trauma patients | The following admission TEG parameters were found to predict mortality: kTEG A10 and MA; FF A5, A10, and MA. For transfused patients, all TEG parameters were predictive of mortality except for rTEG MA and kTEG MA. |
| Wang et al., 2020 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 402 trauma patients with ISS > 15 | Hyperfibrinolysis on FIBTEM at index presentation was independently associated with a significantly higher mortality (22.3%) compared to those without hyperfibrinolysis (10.3%). |
| Tsantes et al., 2021 [ | Case-Control Study | 198 hip fractures undergoing arthroplasty or intramedullary nailing, age-matched to 52 controls | Post injury, hip fracture patients demonstrated hypercoagulability by abnormal EXTEM MCF and alpha angle, and INTEM MCF, A10, and alpha angle. Postoperative ROTEM analysis trended towards increased hypercoagulability |
| Ng 2004 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 132 fracture repair patients | Prior to anesthesia induction, age weakly correlated to increasing hypercoagulability on TEG. |
Abbreviations: injury severity score (ISS); maximum rate of thrombin generation (MRTG); reaction time (R); rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM); thromboelastography (TEG); time to maximum rate of thrombin generation (TMRTG).
Summary of the literature pertaining to viscoelastic hemostatic assays applied to patients undergoing arthroplasty.
| First Author | Study Design | No. of Patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wang et al., 2018 [ | Prospective Cohort | 75 unilateral TKA patients. All patients received 10 mg rivaroxaban postoperatively once daily. | Ecchymosis postoperatively was significantly associated with a postoperatively increased R and decreased alpha angle and CI compared to preoperative TEG analysis. |
| Lloyd-Donald et al., 2021 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 52 elective THA patients (20 general anesthesia, 32 spinal anesthesia). All patients received postoperative DVT chemoprophylaxis. | Regardless of anesthesia technique, postoperative TEG demonstrated hypercoagulability by gradually increased MA through POD5. CCTs only demonstrated significantly elevated fibrinogen levels postop for both anesthesia techniques. TEG/CCT correlation to VTE was not reported. |
| Yang et al., 2014 [ | Prospective Cohort | 90 TKA or THA patients. All received 10 days thromboprophylaxis with enoxaparin | On POD9, 37.8% of patients were hypercoagulable on TEG despite thromboprophylaxis. There was a significant trend towards hypercoagulability on PODs 1–4 for parameters K, MA, alpha angle, and CI. MA and alpha angle remained increased on PODs 4–9. |
| Wu et al., 2019 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 359 THA or TKA patients who received at least 1 dose of TXA immediately prior to surgery. | Patients who received multiple doses of TXA preoperatively demonstrated significantly greater hypercoagulability by TEG for 7 days postoperation compared to those who only received a single dose of TXA. However, using multiple doses of TXA was not correlated to VTE. |
| Grant et al., 2018 [ | Prospective Cohort | 23 TKA (12 received TXA preoperatively and immediately after surgery) | No significant difference in ROTEM parameters was detected for those who received TXA compared to those who did not receive TXA. |
| Zhang et al., 2020 [ | Prospective Cohort | 174 THA (86 received TXA, 88 no TXA) | There was no significant difference in coagulation status by TEG or CCT analysis on the day before operation, POD1, or POD7 for those patients who received TXA. There was no difference in VTE rate. The TXA group had significantly lower blood loss and transfusion requirement. |
| Kohro et al., 1998 [ | Prospective Cohort | 22 TKA patients (11 extradural anesthesia (EA) and 11 general anesthesia (GA)) | Tourniquet inflation was associated with an increase in MA greater in the GA group. Fibrinolysis significantly increased in both anesthesia groups 5 min after tourniquet deflation. |
| Topcu et al., 2012 [ | Prospective Cohort | 75 orthopedic patients undergoing TKA or THA | Maintenance fluids of Ringer’s lactate, 6% hydroxyethyl starch, and 4% gelofusine solution each had mild changes on TEG parameters immediately and 24 h postoperation, but all changes were within normal limits. |
Abbreviations: common coagulation test (CCT); clot formation time (CFT); coagulation index (CI); deep vein thrombosis (DVT); clot kinetics (K); maximum amplitude (MA); maximum clot formation (MCF); postoperative day (POD); reaction time (R); rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM); thromboelastography (TEG); tranexamic acid (TXA); venous thromboembolism (VTE).
Summary of the literature pertaining to viscoelastic hemostatic assays applied to patients undergoing spine surgery.
| First Author | Study Design | No. of Patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Li et al., 2020 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 80 lumbar fusion patients (39 aspirin-treated and 41 aspirin-naïve) | There was no significant difference in perioperative TEG values between the two treatment groups. |
| Mittermayr et al., 2007 [ | Prospective Cohort | 66 spinal fusion patients | Magnitude of MCF reduction is affected by the type of intraoperative maintenance fluid used. Colloids showed a greater change in MCF compared to crystalloid. FIBTEM MCF <7 mm predicted clinical bleeding and the need for fibrinogen replacement. Hydroxyethyl starch demonstrates the most significant decrease in fibrin polymerization. |
| Mittermayr et al., 2008 [ | Prospective Cohort | 66 spinal fusion patients | As determined by an in vitro tPA challenge test (invoked hyperfibrinolysis), patients administered intraoperative maintenance fluids with colloids demonstrated more rapid clot dissolution compared to those provided crystalloid. |
Abbreviations: common coagulation test (CCT); fresh frozen plasma (FFP); maximum amplitude (MA); postoperative day (POD); packed red blood cells (pRBC); thromboelastography (TEG); venous thromboembolism (VTE).
Summary of the literature pertaining to viscoelastic hemostatic assays applied to the intraoperative conduct of patients undergoing elective orthopedic surgery.
| First Author | Study Design | No. of Patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al., 2021 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 480 orthopedic surgery patients (266 TEG-guided, 214 CCT-guided; 202 spinal surgeries, 180 fracture surgeries, and 98 TKA) | TEG guided intraoperative transfusion required lower volumes of pRBCs, FFP, cryoprecipitate, and platelets. |
| Spiezia et al., 2016 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 40 elective orthopedic patients (THA, femur fracture fixation, and spinal surgery) who had ≥250 mL/h blood loss intraoperatively | Intraoperative blood loss significantly correlated with preoperative low platelet count and low FIBTEM MCF, and postoperative low fibrinogen and platelet count, prolonged CFT, and decreased alpha angle and MCF |
| Hanke et al., 2020 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 70 THA, TKA, or spinal fusion patients (23 received transfusions) | CT was significantly prolonged and FIBTEM decreased preoperatively in the group that required postoperative transfusions. |
| Froessler et al., 2015 [ | Prospective Cohort | 25 orthopedic patients undergoing THA | ROTEM did not indicate coagulopathy after reinfusion of unwashed salvaged whole blood. |
| Lee et al., 2018 [ | Prospective Cohort | 14 healthy adults undergoing elective orthopedic surgery compared to controls | Increasing supratherapeutic concentrations of sugammadex were significantly associated with decreases in coagulation as manifested by prolongation in TEG R time, time to maximum rate of thrombus generation (TMRTG), and decreases in the alpha angle, MA, and maximum rate of thrombus generation (MRTG). |
Abbreviations: reaction time (R); thromboelastography (TEG).
Summary of the literature pertaining to viscoelastic hemostatic assays applied to the prediction and prevention of venous thromboembolism among orthopedic operative patients.
| First Author | Study Design | No. of Patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cotton et al., 2012 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 2070 trauma activations (53 developed PE) | Elevated MA at admission was an independent predictor of PE. MA >65 had an odds ratio of 3.5, and MA >72 had an odds ratio of 5.8. |
| Gary et al., 2016 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 1818 (310 extremity AIS ≥ 2, | Admission rTEG MA predicted VTE in patients with severe extremity trauma with an OR = 3.66 for MA ≥65 and OR = 6.7 for MA ≥72. |
| Brill et al., 2017 [ | Prospective Cohort | 684 trauma patients who received surveillance u/s and admission TEG | Admission TEG demonstrated hypercoagulability in 582 (85.1%) patients. LE DVT was diagnosed in 99 (14.5%) patients. Despite prophylaxis, hypercoagulable TEG carried a two-fold risk of DVT (OR 2.41, 95% CI 1.11–5.24). |
| Tsantes et al., 2021 [ | Retrospective Cohort | 354 femoral neck and peritrochanteric fracture patients | Several abnormal ROTEM values were found predictive of VTE: Increased preop MCF (median 70 mm), decreased preop CFT (median 61 s), and decreased postop CFT (median 52 s). Preop CFT demonstrated the greatest prediction of VTE with sensitivity of 81% and specificity of 86%. |
| Parameswaran et al., 2016 [ | Prospective Cohort | 101 hip fracture or elective THA/TKA patients who did not receive postoperative chemoprophylaxis for DVT | DVT incidence was 7%. Only 1 patient with DVT demonstrated hypercoagulability on preoperative TEG. For those without DVT, 37/94 demonstrated hypercoagulability on preoperative TEG. No TEG parameter was predictive of DVT. |
| Brown et al., 2020 [ | Systematic review (35 studies) & meta-analysis (5 studies) | 8939 postoperative patients | MA >65 was not predictive of VTE (OR 1.31, 95% CI 0.74–2.34). There was wide variability across studies for the threshold MA value of hypercoagulability and the pooled mean threshold value was 66.7 mm. TEG consistently showed hypercoagulability on POD1. |
| Hepner et al., 2002 [ | Prospective cohort | 52 TKA patients receiving DVT prophylaxis with warfarin | On the day of epidural catheter removal, R was increased compared to preoperative values but still within normal range. CI was normal. Only INR was elevated to an average of 1.48 at the time of catheter removal. |
| Klein et al., 2000 [ | Prospective Cohort | 24 unilateral TKA/THA patients | TEG parameters R and K correlated well with anticipated peak and trough of postoperative LMWH and anti-Xa levels. |
| Oswald et al., 2015 [ | Prospective Cohort | 188 orthopaedic surgery patients (receiving 40 mg enoxaparin or 10 mg rivaroxaban) | Increase in EXTEM CT was greater with rivaroxaban than enoxaparin. |
Abbreviations: amplitude at 5 min (A5); amplitude at 10 min (A10); clot formation time (CFT); coagulation index (CI); clotting time (CT); deep vein thrombosis (DVT); functional fibrinogin (FF); general anesthesia (GA); international normalized ratios (INR); clot kinetics (K); kaolin thromboelastography (k-TEG); low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH); maximum amplitude (MA); maximum clot formation (MCF); pulmonary embolism (PE); postoperative day (POD); reaction time (R); rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) rapid thromboelastography (rTEG); trauma-induced coagulopathy (TIC); venous thromboembolism (VTE).