-
Multicenter Study
The impact of fresh frozen plasma vs coagulation factor concentrates on morbidity and mortality in trauma-associated haemorrhage and massive transfusion.
- Ulrike Nienaber, Petra Innerhofer, Isabella Westermann, Herbert Schöchl, Rene Attal, Robert Breitkopf, and Marc Maegele.
- Institute for Research in Operative Medicine, University of Witten/Herdecke, Cologne, Germany.
- Injury. 2011 Jul 1;42(7):697-701.
IntroductionClinical observations together with recent research highlighted the role of coagulopathy in acute trauma care and early aggressive treatment has been shown to reduce mortality.MethodsDatasets from severely injured and bleeding patients with established coagulopathy upon emergency room (ER) arrival from two retrospective trauma databases, (i) TR-DGU (Germany) and (ii) Innsbruck Trauma Databank/ITB (Austria), that had received two different strategies of coagulopathy management during initial resuscitation, (i) fresh frozen plasma (FFP) without coagulation factor concentrates, and (ii) coagulation factor concentrates (fibrinogen and/or prothrombin complex concentrates) without FFP, were compared for morbidity, mortality and transfusion requirements using a matched-pair analysis approach.ResultsThere were no major differences in basic characteristics and physiological variables upon ER admission between the two cohorts that were matched. ITB patients had received substantially less packed red blood cell (pRBC) concentrates within the first 6h after admission (median 1.0 (IQR(25-75) 0-3) vs 7.5 (IQR(25-75) 4-12) units; p<0.005) and the first 24h as compared to TR-DGU patients (median 3 (IQR(25-75) 0-5) vs 12.5 (8-20) units; p<0.005). Overall mortality was comparable between both groups whilst the frequency for multi organ failure was significantly lower within the group that had received coagulation factor concentrates exclusively and no FFP during initial resuscitation (n=3 vs n=15; p=0.015). This translated into trends towards reduced days on ventilator whilst on ICU and shorter overall in-hospital length of stays (LOS).ConclusionAlthough there was no difference in overall mortality between both groups, significant differences with regard to morbidity and need for allogenic transfusion provide a signal supporting the management of acute post-traumatic coagulopathy with coagulation factor concentrates rather than with traditional FFP transfusions. Prospective and randomised clinical trials with sufficient patient numbers based upon this strategy are advocated.Copyright © 2011. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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