Ker Katharine, Roberts Ian, Shakur Haleema, Coats Tim J
Cochrane Injuries Group, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Room 186, Keppel Street, London, UK, WC1E 7HT.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 May 9;2015(5):CD004896. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004896.pub4.
Uncontrolled bleeding is an important cause of death in trauma victims. Antifibrinolytic treatment has been shown to reduce blood loss following surgery and may also be effective in reducing blood loss following trauma.
To assess the effect of antifibrinolytic drugs in patients with acute traumatic injury.
We ran the most recent search in January 2015. We searched the Cochrane Injuries Group's Specialised Register, The Cochrane Library, Ovid MEDLINE(R), Ovid MEDLINE(R) In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations, Ovid MEDLINE(R) Daily and Ovid OLDMEDLINE(R), Embase Classic+Embase (OvidSP), PubMed and clinical trials registries.
Randomised controlled trials of antifibrinolytic agents (aprotinin, tranexamic acid [TXA], epsilon-aminocaproic acid and aminomethylbenzoic acid) following acute traumatic injury.
From the results of the screened electronic searches, bibliographic searches, and contacts with experts, two authors independently selected trials meeting the inclusion criteria, and extracted data. One review author assessed the risk of bias for key domains.Outcome measures included: mortality at end of follow-up (all-cause); adverse events (specifically vascular occlusive events [myocardial infarction, stroke, deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism] and renal failure); number of patients undergoing surgical intervention or receiving blood transfusion; volume of blood transfused; volume of intracranial bleeding; brain ischaemic lesions; death or disability.We rated the quality of the evidence as 'high', 'moderate', 'low' or 'very low' according to the GRADE approach.
Three trials met the inclusion criteria.Two trials (n = 20,451) assessed the effect of TXA. The larger of these (CRASH-2, n = 20,211) was conducted in 40 countries and included patients with a variety of types of trauma; the other (n = 240) restricted itself to those with traumatic brain injury (TBI) only.One trial (n = 77) assessed aprotinin in participants with major bony trauma and shock.The pooled data show that antifibrinolytic drugs reduce the risk of death from any cause by 10% (RR 0.90, 95% CI 0.85 to 0.96; P = 0.002) (quality of evidence: high). This estimate is based primarily on data from the CRASH-2 trial of TXA, which contributed 99% of the data.There is no evidence that antifibrinolytics have an effect on the risk of vascular occlusive events (quality of evidence: moderate), need for surgical intervention or receipt of blood transfusion (quality of evidence: high). There is no evidence for a difference in the effect by type of antifibrinolytic (TXA versus aprotinin) however, as the pooled analyses were based predominantly on trial data concerning the effects of TXA, the results can only be confidently applied to the effects of TXA. The effects of aprotinin in this patient group remain uncertain.There is some evidence from pooling data from one study (n = 240) and a subset of data from CRASH-2 (n = 270) in patients with TBI which suggest that TXA may reduce mortality although the estimates are imprecise, the quality of evidence is low, and uncertainty remains. Stronger evidence exists for the possibility of TXA reducing intracranial bleeding in this population.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: TXA safely reduces mortality in trauma patients with bleeding without increasing the risk of adverse events. TXA should be given as early as possible and within three hours of injury, as further analysis of the CRASH-2 trial showed that treatment later than this is unlikely to be effective and may be harmful. Although there is some promising evidence for the effect of TXA in patients with TBI, substantial uncertainty remains.Two ongoing trials being conducted in patients with isolated TBI should resolve these remaining uncertainties.
出血控制不佳是创伤患者死亡的重要原因。抗纤溶治疗已被证明可减少手术后的失血,对减少创伤后的失血可能也有效。
评估抗纤溶药物对急性创伤性损伤患者的疗效。
我们于2015年1月进行了最新检索。我们检索了Cochrane损伤组专业注册库、Cochrane图书馆、Ovid MEDLINE(R)、Ovid MEDLINE(R)在研及其他未索引引文、Ovid MEDLINE(R)日报和Ovid OLDMEDLINE(R)、Embase经典版+Embase(OvidSP)、PubMed以及临床试验注册库。
急性创伤性损伤后使用抗纤溶药物(抑肽酶、氨甲环酸[TXA]、ε-氨基己酸和氨甲苯酸)的随机对照试验。
从筛选出的电子检索结果、文献检索以及与专家的联系中,两位作者独立选择符合纳入标准的试验,并提取数据。一位综述作者评估关键领域的偏倚风险。结局指标包括:随访结束时的死亡率(全因);不良事件(特别是血管闭塞性事件[心肌梗死、中风、深静脉血栓形成或肺栓塞]和肾衰竭);接受手术干预或输血的患者数量;输血量;颅内出血量;脑缺血性病变;死亡或残疾。我们根据GRADE方法将证据质量评为“高”“中”“低”或“极低”。
三项试验符合纳入标准。两项试验(n = 20,451)评估了TXA的效果。其中规模较大的一项(CRASH-2,n = 20,211)在40个国家进行,纳入了各种类型创伤的患者;另一项(n = 240)仅纳入了创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者。一项试验(n = 77)评估了抑肽酶对严重骨创伤和休克患者的效果。汇总数据显示,抗纤溶药物可使任何原因导致的死亡风险降低10%(RR 0.90,95%CI 0.85至0.96;P = 0.002)(证据质量:高)。这一估计主要基于TXA的CRASH-2试验数据,该试验贡献了99%的数据。没有证据表明抗纤溶药物对血管闭塞性事件风险有影响(证据质量:中),对手术干预需求或输血情况也无影响(证据质量:高)。没有证据表明不同类型的抗纤溶药物(TXA与抑肽酶)在效果上存在差异,不过,由于汇总分析主要基于关于TXA效果的试验数据,结果只能可靠地应用于TXA的效果。抑肽酶在该患者群体中的效果仍不确定。有一些证据来自一项研究(n = 240)的数据汇总以及CRASH-2中一部分TBI患者的数据(n = 270),表明TXA可能降低死亡率,尽管估计值不精确,证据质量低,且不确定性仍然存在。有更强的证据表明TXA有可能减少该人群的颅内出血。
TXA可安全降低出血性创伤患者的死亡率,且不增加不良事件风险。TXA应尽早在受伤后三小时内给予,因为对CRASH-2试验的进一步分析表明,在此之后进行治疗不太可能有效,甚至可能有害。尽管有一些关于TXA对TBI患者效果的有前景的证据,但仍存在很大不确定性。两项正在进行的针对孤立性TBI患者的试验应能解决这些剩余的不确定性。