Perkins Jeremy G, Cap Andrew P, Spinella Philip C, Blackbourne Lorne H, Grathwohl Kurt W, Repine Thomas B, Ketchum Lloyd, Waterman Paige, Lee Ruth E, Beekley Alec C, Sebesta James A, Shorr Andrew F, Wade Charles E, Holcomb John B
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA.
J Trauma. 2009 Apr;66(4 Suppl):S77-84; discussion S84-5. doi: 10.1097/TA.0b013e31819d8936.
Trauma is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Of patients arriving to trauma centers, patients requiring massive transfusion (MT, >or=10 units in 24 hours) are a small patient subset but are at the highest risk of mortality. Transfusion of appropriate ratios of blood products to such patients has recently been an area of interest to both the civilian and military medical community. Plasma is increasingly recognized as a critical component, though less is known about appropriate ratios of platelets. Combat casualties managed at the busiest combat hospital in Iraq provided an opportunity to examine this question.
In-patient records for 8,618 trauma casualties treated at the military hospital in Baghdad more than a 3-year interval between January 2004 and December 2006 were retrospectively reviewed and patients requiring MT (n = 694) were identified. Patients who required MT in the first 24 hours and did not receive fresh whole blood were divided into study groups defined by source of platelets: (1) patient receiving a low ratio of platelets (<1:16 apheresis platelets per stored red cell unit, aPLT:RBC) (n = 214), (2) patients receiving a medium ratio of platelets (1:16 to <1:8 aPLT:RBC) (n = 154), and (3) patients receiving a high ratio of platelets (>or=1:8 aPLT:RBC) (n = 96). The primary endpoint was survival at 24 hours and at 30 days.
At 24 hours, patients receiving a high ratio of platelets had higher survival (95%) as compared with patients receiving a medium ratio (87%) and patients receiving the lowest ratio of platelets (64%) (log-rank p = 0.04 and p < 0.001, respectively). The survival benefit for the high and medium ratio groups remained at 30 days as compared with those receiving the lowest ratio of platelets (75% and 60% vs. 43%, p < 0.001 for both comparisons). On multivariate regression, plasma:RBC ratios and aPLT:RBC were both independently associated with improved survival at 24 hours and at 30 days.
Transfusion of a ratio of >or=1:8 aPLT:RBC is associated with improved survival at 24 hours and at 30 days in combat casualties requiring a MT within 24 hours of injury. Although prospective study is needed to confirm this finding, MT protocols outside of investigational research should consider incorporation of appropriate ratios of both plasma and platelets.
创伤是全球发病和死亡的主要原因。在送至创伤中心的患者中,需要大量输血(MT,24小时内输注≥10单位)的患者占比小,但死亡风险最高。向这类患者输注适当比例的血液制品最近已成为民用和军事医学界关注的领域。血浆越来越被认为是关键成分,不过对于血小板的适当比例了解较少。在伊拉克最繁忙的战斗医院接受治疗的战斗伤员为研究这一问题提供了契机。
回顾性分析2004年1月至2006年12月三年多时间里在巴格达军事医院接受治疗的8618例创伤伤员的住院记录,确定需要大量输血的患者(n = 694)。在最初24小时内需要大量输血且未接受新鲜全血的患者,根据血小板来源分为研究组:(1)接受低血小板比例(每单位储存红细胞中去白细胞单采血小板<1:16,aPLT:RBC)的患者(n = 214),(2)接受中等血小板比例(1:16至<1:8 aPLT:RBC)的患者(n = 154),以及(3)接受高血小板比例(≥1:8 aPLT:RBC)的患者(n = 96)。主要终点是24小时和30天的生存率。
在24小时时,接受高血小板比例的患者生存率(95%)高于接受中等血小板比例的患者(87%)和接受最低血小板比例的患者(64%)(对数秩检验p分别为0.04和<0.001)。与接受最低血小板比例的患者相比,高比例和中等比例组在30天时的生存获益仍然存在(75%和60% vs. 43%,两项比较p均<0.001)。多因素回归分析显示,血浆:红细胞比例和aPLT:RBC均与24小时和30天生存率的提高独立相关。
对于受伤后24小时内需要大量输血的战斗伤员,输注≥1:8 aPLT:RBC的比例与24小时和30天生存率的提高相关。尽管需要前瞻性研究来证实这一发现,但非研究性的大量输血方案应考虑纳入适当比例的血浆和血小板。