Beattie Gwyn W, Jeffrey Robert R
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen, UK.
Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg. 2014 Jan;18(1):117-20. doi: 10.1093/icvts/ivt327. Epub 2013 Sep 7.
A best evidence topic in cardiac surgery was written according to a structured protocol. The question addressed was, 'in [patients with heparin resistance] is [treatment with FFP] superior [to antithrombin administration] in [achieving adequate anticoagulation to facilitate safe cardiopulmonary bypass]?' More than 29 papers were found using the reported search, of which six represented the best evidence to answer the clinical question. The authors, journal, date and country of publication, patient group studied, study type, relevant outcomes and results of these papers are tabulated. Antithrombin (AT) binds to heparin and increases the rate at which it binds to thrombin. The levels of antithrombin in the blood are an important aspect of the heparin dose-response curve. When the activated clotting time (ACT) fails to reach a target >480, this is commonly defined as heparin resistance (HR). Heparin resistance is usually treated with a combination of supplementary heparin, fresh frozen plasma (FFP) or antithrombin III concentrate. There is a paucity of evidence on the treatment of heparin resistance with FFP, with only five studies identified, including one retrospective study, one in vitro trial and three case reports. AT has been studied more extensively with multiple studies, including a crossover trial comparing AT to supplemental heparin and a multicentre, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trial. Antithrombin (AT) concentrate is a safe and efficient treatment for heparin resistance to elevate the activated clotting time (ACT). It avoids the risk of transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI), volume overload, intraoperative time delay and viral or vCJD transmission. Antithrombin concentrates are more expensive than fresh frozen plasma and may put patients at risk of heparin rebound in the early postoperative period. Patients treated with AT have a lower risk of further FFP transfusions during their stay in hospital. We conclude that the treatment of HR with FFP may not restore the ACT to therapeutic levels with adequate heparinization, but AT is efficient with benefits including lower volume administration, less risk of TRALI and lower risk of transfusion-related infections.
一篇心脏外科的最佳证据主题文章是按照结构化方案撰写的。所探讨的问题是,“在[肝素抵抗患者]中,[使用新鲜冰冻血浆治疗]在[实现充分抗凝以利于安全体外循环]方面是否优于[给予抗凝血酶]?”通过报告的检索发现了29篇以上的论文,其中6篇代表了回答该临床问题的最佳证据。这些论文的作者、期刊、出版日期和国家、研究的患者组、研究类型、相关结局和结果均列于表格中。抗凝血酶(AT)与肝素结合并提高其与凝血酶结合的速率。血液中抗凝血酶的水平是肝素剂量反应曲线的一个重要方面。当活化凝血时间(ACT)未能达到>480的目标值时,这通常被定义为肝素抵抗(HR)。肝素抵抗通常用补充肝素、新鲜冰冻血浆(FFP)或抗凝血酶III浓缩物联合治疗。关于使用FFP治疗肝素抵抗的证据很少,仅确定了5项研究,包括一项回顾性研究、一项体外试验和三篇病例报告。AT已得到更广泛的研究,有多项研究,包括一项将AT与补充肝素进行比较的交叉试验以及一项多中心、随机、双盲、安慰剂对照试验。抗凝血酶(AT)浓缩物是治疗肝素抵抗以提高活化凝血时间(ACT)的一种安全有效的方法。它避免了输血相关急性肺损伤(TRALI)、容量超负荷、术中时间延迟以及病毒或变异克雅氏病传播的风险。抗凝血酶浓缩物比新鲜冰冻血浆更昂贵,并且可能使患者在术后早期有肝素反跳的风险。接受AT治疗的患者在住院期间进一步输注FFP的风险较低。我们得出结论,用FFP治疗HR可能无法通过充分肝素化将ACT恢复到治疗水平,但AT是有效的,其益处包括较低的输注量、较低的TRALI风险和较低的输血相关感染风险。