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Observational Study
Application of a TEG-Platelet Mapping Algorithm to Guide Reversal of Antiplatelet Agents in Adults with Mild-to-Moderate Traumatic Brain Injury: An Observational Pilot Study.
- Svetlana Kvint, Alexis Gutierrez, Anya Venezia, Eileen Maloney, James Schuster, and Monisha A Kumar.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce Street 3 Silverstein, Philadelphia, PA, USA. Svetlana.Kvint@pennmedicine.upenn.edu.
- Neurocrit Care. 2022 Dec 1; 37 (3): 638648638-648.
BackgroundTraumatic intracranial hemorrhages expand in one third of cases, and antiplatelet medications may exacerbate hematoma expansion. However, the reversal of an antiplatelet effect with platelet transfusion has been associated with harm. We sought to determine whether a thromboelastography platelet mapping (TEG-PM)-guided algorithm could limit platelet transfusion in patients with hemorrhagic traumatic brain injury (TBI) prescribed antiplatelet medications without a resultant clinically significant increase in hemorrhage volume, late hemostatic treatments, or delayed operative intervention.MethodsA total of 175 consecutive patients with TBI were admitted to our university-affiliated, level I trauma center between March 2016 and December 2019: 54 preintervention patients (control) and 121 patients with TEG-PM (study). After exclusion for anticoagulant administration, availability of neuroimaging and emergent neurosurgery, 62 study patients and 37 control patients remained. Intervention consisted of administration of desmopressin (DDAVP) for nonsurgical patients with significant inhibition at the arachidonic acid or adenosine diphosphate receptor sites. For surgical patients with significant inhibition, dual therapy with DDAVP and platelet transfusion was employed. Study patients were compared with a group of historical controls, which were identified from a prospectively maintained registry and typically treated with empiric platelet transfusion.ResultsMedian age was 75 years (interquartile range 85-67) and 77 years (interquartile range 81-65) in the TEG-PM and control patient groups, respectively. Admission hemorrhage volumes were similar (10.7 cm3 [20.1] in patients with TEG-PM vs. 14.1 cm3 [19.7] in controls; p = 0.41). There were no significant differences in admission Glasgow Coma Scale, mechanism of trauma, or baseline comorbidities. A total of 57% of controls versus 10% of patients with TEG-PM (p < 0.001) were transfused platelets; 52% of intervention patients and 0% controls were treated with DDAVP. Expansion hemorrhage volumes were not significantly different (14.0 cm3 [20.2] patients with TEG-PM versus 13.6 cm3 [23.7] controls; p = 0.93). There was no significant difference in rates of clinical deterioration, delayed neurosurgical intervention, or late platelet transfusion between groups.ConclusionsAmong patients with hemorrhagic TBI prescribed preinjury antiplatelet therapy, our study suggests that the use of a TEG-PM algorithm may reduce platelet transfusions without a concurrent increase in clinically significant hematoma expansion. Further study is required to prove a causative relationship.© 2022. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and Neurocritical Care Society.
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