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Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group

BACKGROUND: Traumatic coagulopathy is thought to increase mortality and its treatment to reduce preventable deaths. However, there is still uncertainty in this field, and available literature results may have been overestimated. METHODS: We searched the MEDLINE database using the PubMed platform. We...

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Autores principales: Poole, Daniele, Cortegiani, Andrea, Chieregato, Arturo, Russo, Emanuele, Pellegrini, Concetta, De Blasio, Elvio, Mengoli, Francesca, Volpi, Annalisa, Grossi, Silvia, Gianesello, Lara, Orzalesi, Vanni, Fossi, Francesca, Chiara, Osvaldo, Coniglio, Carlo, Gordini, Giovanni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5047588/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27695109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164090
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author Poole, Daniele
Cortegiani, Andrea
Chieregato, Arturo
Russo, Emanuele
Pellegrini, Concetta
De Blasio, Elvio
Mengoli, Francesca
Volpi, Annalisa
Grossi, Silvia
Gianesello, Lara
Orzalesi, Vanni
Fossi, Francesca
Chiara, Osvaldo
Coniglio, Carlo
Gordini, Giovanni
author_facet Poole, Daniele
Cortegiani, Andrea
Chieregato, Arturo
Russo, Emanuele
Pellegrini, Concetta
De Blasio, Elvio
Mengoli, Francesca
Volpi, Annalisa
Grossi, Silvia
Gianesello, Lara
Orzalesi, Vanni
Fossi, Francesca
Chiara, Osvaldo
Coniglio, Carlo
Gordini, Giovanni
author_sort Poole, Daniele
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Traumatic coagulopathy is thought to increase mortality and its treatment to reduce preventable deaths. However, there is still uncertainty in this field, and available literature results may have been overestimated. METHODS: We searched the MEDLINE database using the PubMed platform. We formulated four queries investigating the prognostic weight of traumatic coagulopathy defined according to conventional laboratory testing, and the effectiveness in reducing mortality of three different treatments aimed at contrasting coagulopathy (high fresh frozen plasma/packed red blood cells ratios, fibrinogen, and tranexamic acid administration). Randomized controlled trials were selected along with observational studies that used a multivariable approach to adjust for confounding. Strict criteria were adopted for quality assessment based on a two-step approach. First, we rated quality of evidence according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) criteria. Then, this rating was downgraded if other three criteria were not met: high reporting quality according to shared standards, absence of internal methodological and statistical issues not detailed by the GRADE system, and absence of external validity issues. RESULTS: With few exceptions, the GRADE rating, reporting and methodological quality of observational studies was “very low”, with frequent external validity issues. The only two randomized trials retrieved were, instead, of high quality. Only weak evidence was found for a relation between coagulopathy and mortality. Very weak evidence was found supporting the use of fibrinogen administration to reduce mortality in trauma. On the other hand, we found high evidence that the use of 1:1 vs. 1:2 high fresh frozen plasma/packed red blood cells ratios failed to obtain a 12% mortality reduction. This does not exclude lower mortality rates, which have not been investigated. The use of tranexamic acid in trauma was supported by “high” quality evidence according to the GRADE classification but was downgraded to “moderate” for external validity issues. CONCLUSIONS: Tranexamic acid is effective in reducing mortality in trauma. The other transfusion practices we investigated have been inadequately studied in the literature, as well as the independent association between mortality and coagulopathy measured with traditional laboratory testing. Overall, in this field of research literature quality is poor.
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spelling pubmed-50475882016-10-27 Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group Poole, Daniele Cortegiani, Andrea Chieregato, Arturo Russo, Emanuele Pellegrini, Concetta De Blasio, Elvio Mengoli, Francesca Volpi, Annalisa Grossi, Silvia Gianesello, Lara Orzalesi, Vanni Fossi, Francesca Chiara, Osvaldo Coniglio, Carlo Gordini, Giovanni PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Traumatic coagulopathy is thought to increase mortality and its treatment to reduce preventable deaths. However, there is still uncertainty in this field, and available literature results may have been overestimated. METHODS: We searched the MEDLINE database using the PubMed platform. We formulated four queries investigating the prognostic weight of traumatic coagulopathy defined according to conventional laboratory testing, and the effectiveness in reducing mortality of three different treatments aimed at contrasting coagulopathy (high fresh frozen plasma/packed red blood cells ratios, fibrinogen, and tranexamic acid administration). Randomized controlled trials were selected along with observational studies that used a multivariable approach to adjust for confounding. Strict criteria were adopted for quality assessment based on a two-step approach. First, we rated quality of evidence according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) criteria. Then, this rating was downgraded if other three criteria were not met: high reporting quality according to shared standards, absence of internal methodological and statistical issues not detailed by the GRADE system, and absence of external validity issues. RESULTS: With few exceptions, the GRADE rating, reporting and methodological quality of observational studies was “very low”, with frequent external validity issues. The only two randomized trials retrieved were, instead, of high quality. Only weak evidence was found for a relation between coagulopathy and mortality. Very weak evidence was found supporting the use of fibrinogen administration to reduce mortality in trauma. On the other hand, we found high evidence that the use of 1:1 vs. 1:2 high fresh frozen plasma/packed red blood cells ratios failed to obtain a 12% mortality reduction. This does not exclude lower mortality rates, which have not been investigated. The use of tranexamic acid in trauma was supported by “high” quality evidence according to the GRADE classification but was downgraded to “moderate” for external validity issues. CONCLUSIONS: Tranexamic acid is effective in reducing mortality in trauma. The other transfusion practices we investigated have been inadequately studied in the literature, as well as the independent association between mortality and coagulopathy measured with traditional laboratory testing. Overall, in this field of research literature quality is poor. Public Library of Science 2016-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC5047588/ /pubmed/27695109 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164090 Text en © 2016 Poole et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Poole, Daniele
Cortegiani, Andrea
Chieregato, Arturo
Russo, Emanuele
Pellegrini, Concetta
De Blasio, Elvio
Mengoli, Francesca
Volpi, Annalisa
Grossi, Silvia
Gianesello, Lara
Orzalesi, Vanni
Fossi, Francesca
Chiara, Osvaldo
Coniglio, Carlo
Gordini, Giovanni
Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group
title Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group
title_full Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group
title_fullStr Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group
title_full_unstemmed Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group
title_short Blood Component Therapy and Coagulopathy in Trauma: A Systematic Review of the Literature from the Trauma Update Group
title_sort blood component therapy and coagulopathy in trauma: a systematic review of the literature from the trauma update group
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5047588/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27695109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164090
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