학술논문

Goal-directed Hemostatic Resuscitation of Trauma-induced Coagulopathy
Document Type
article
Source
Annals of Surgery. 263(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Hematology
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Clinical Research
Adult
Blood Coagulation Disorders
Blood Transfusion
Colorado
Female
Hemostatic Techniques
Humans
Injury Severity Score
Male
Middle Aged
Resuscitation
Survival Rate
Thrombelastography
Trauma Centers
Treatment Outcome
Wounds and Injuries
coagulopathy
fibrinolysis
goal-directed
resuscitation
thrombelastography
transfusion
Medical and Health Sciences
Surgery
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundMassive transfusion protocols (MTPs) have become standard of care in the management of bleeding injured patients, yet strategies to guide them vary widely. We conducted a pragmatic, randomized clinical trial (RCT) to test the hypothesis that an MTP goal directed by the viscoelastic assay thrombelastography (TEG) improves survival compared with an MTP guided by conventional coagulation assays (CCA).MethodsThis RCT enrolled injured patients from an academic level-1 trauma center meeting criteria for MTP activation. Upon MTP activation, patients were randomized to be managed either by an MTP goal directed by TEG or by CCA (ie, international normalized ratio, fibrinogen, platelet count). Primary outcome was 28-day survival.ResultsOne hundred eleven patients were included in an intent-to-treat analysis (TEG = 56, CCA = 55). Survival in the TEG group was significantly higher than the CCA group (log-rank P = 0.032, Wilcoxon P = 0.027); 20 deaths in the CCA group (36.4%) compared with 11 in the TEG group (19.6%) (P = 0.049). Most deaths occurred within the first 6 hours from arrival (21.8% CCA group vs 7.1% TEG group) (P = 0.032). CCA patients required similar number of red blood cell units as the TEG patients [CCA: 5.0 (2-11), TEG: 4.5 (2-8)] (P = 0.317), but more plasma units [CCA: 2.0 (0-4), TEG: 0.0 (0-3)] (P = 0.022), and more platelets units [CCA: 0.0 (0-1), TEG: 0.0 (0-0)] (P = 0.041) in the first 2 hours of resuscitation.ConclusionsUtilization of a goal-directed, TEG-guided MTP to resuscitate severely injured patients improves survival compared with an MTP guided by CCA and utilizes less plasma and platelet transfusions during the early phase of resuscitation.