• J Trauma Acute Care Surg · Nov 2019

    It's About Time: Transfusion effects on postinjury platelet aggregation over time.

    • Lucy Z Kornblith, Anna Decker, Amanda S Conroy, Carolyn M Hendrickson, Alexander T Fields, Anamaria J Robles, Rachael A Callcut, and Mitchell J Cohen.
    • From the Department of Surgery (L.Z.K., A.D., A.S.C., A.T.F., A.J.R., R.A.C.), Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital; Department of Surgery, (L.Z.K., A.D., A.S.C., A.T.F., A.J.R., R.A.C., C.M.H.), the University of California, San Francisco Department of Medicine (C.M.H.), San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, California; and Department of Surgery (M.J.C.), Denver Health Medical Center and the University of Colorado; Denver, Colorado.
    • J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2019 Nov 1; 87 (5): 1042-1051.

    BackgroundImpaired postinjury platelet aggregation is common, but the effect of transfusion on this remains unclear. Data suggest that following injury platelet transfusion may not correct impaired platelet aggregation, and impaired platelet aggregation may not predict the need for platelet transfusion. We sought to further investigate platelet aggregation responses to transfusions, using regression statistics to isolate the independent effects of transfusions given in discrete time intervals from injury on both immediate and longitudinal platelet aggregation. We hypothesized that platelet aggregation response to platelet transfusion increases over time from injury.MethodsSerial (0-96 hours) blood samples were collected from 248 trauma patients. Platelet aggregation was assessed in vitro with impedance aggregometry stimulated by adenosine diphosphate, collagen, and thrombin receptor-activating peptide-6. Using regression, transfusion exposure was modeled against platelet aggregation at each subsequent timepoint and adjusted for confounders (Injury Severity Score, international normalized ratio (INR), base deficit, platelet count, and interval transfusions). The expected change in platelet aggregation at each timepoint under the intervention of transfusion exposure was calculated and compared with the observed platelet aggregation.ResultsThe 248 patients analyzed were severely injured (Injury Severity Score, 21 ± 19), with normal platelet counts (mean, 268 × 10/L ± 90), and 62% were transfused in 24 hours. The independent effect of transfusions on subsequent platelet aggregation over time was modeled with observed platelet aggregation under hypothetical treatment of one unit transfusion of blood, plasma, or platelets. Platelet transfusions had increasing expected effects on subsequent platelet aggregation over time, with the maximal expected effect occurring late (4-5 days from injury).ConclusionControversy exists on whether transfusions improve impaired postinjury platelet aggregation. Using regression modeling, we identified that expected transfusion effects on subsequent platelet aggregation are maximal with platelet transfusion given late after injury. This is critical for tailored resuscitation, identifying a potential early period of resistance to platelet transfusion that resolves by 96 hours.Level Of EvidenceTherapeutic, level V.

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