Reynolds Penny S, Michael Mary Jane, Cochran Emily D, Wegelin Jacob A, Spiess Bruce D
Department of Anesthesiology, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, VA, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
Trials. 2015 Jul 30;16:321. doi: 10.1186/s13063-015-0844-5.
Severe traumatic injury and haemorrhagic shock are frequently associated with disruptions of coagulation function (such as trauma-induced coagulopathy TIC) and activation of inflammatory cascades. These pathologies may be exacerbated by current standard of care resuscitation protocols. Observational studies suggest early administration of plasma to severely-injured haemorrhaging patients may correct TIC, minimise inflammation, and improve survival. The proposed randomised clinical trial will evaluate the clinical effectiveness of pre-hospital plasma administration compared with standard- of-care crystalloid resuscitation in severely-injured patients with major traumatic haemorrhage.
METHODS/DESIGN: This is a prospective, randomized, open-label, non-blinded trial to determine the effect of pre-hospital administration of thawed plasma (TP) on mortality, morbidity, transfusion requirements, coagulation, and inflammatory response in severely-injured bleeding trauma patients. Two hundred and ten eligible adult trauma patients will be randomised to receive either two units of plasma, to be administered in-field, vs standard of care normal saline (NS). Main analyses will compare subjects allocated to TP to those allocated to NS, on an intention-to-treat basis. Primary outcome measure is all-cause 30-day mortality. Secondary outcome measures include coagulation and lipidomic/pro-inflammatory marker responses, volume of resuscitation fluids (crystalloid, colloid) and blood products administered, and major hospital outcomes (e.g. incidence of MSOF, length of ICU stay, length of hospital stay).
This study is part of a US Department of Defense (DoD)-funded multi-institutional investigation, conducted independently of, but in parallel with, the University of Pittsburgh and University of Denver. Demonstration of significant reductions in mortality and coagulopathic/inflammatory-related morbidities as a result of pre-hospital plasma administration would be of considerable clinical importance for the management of haemorrhagic shock in both civilian and military populations.
ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02303964 on 28 November 2014.
严重创伤性损伤和失血性休克常伴有凝血功能紊乱(如创伤性凝血病TIC)和炎症级联反应激活。当前的标准治疗复苏方案可能会加剧这些病理状况。观察性研究表明,对严重受伤的出血患者早期输注血浆可能纠正创伤性凝血病、将炎症降至最低并提高生存率。拟进行的随机临床试验将评估院前输注血浆与标准治疗晶体液复苏相比,对严重创伤性大出血患者的临床疗效。
方法/设计:这是一项前瞻性、随机、开放标签、非盲试验,旨在确定院前输注解冻血浆(TP)对严重受伤出血创伤患者的死亡率、发病率、输血需求、凝血和炎症反应的影响。210名符合条件的成年创伤患者将被随机分为两组,一组在现场输注两单位血浆,另一组接受标准治疗的生理盐水(NS)。主要分析将在意向性治疗的基础上,比较分配到TP组和NS组的受试者。主要结局指标是全因30天死亡率。次要结局指标包括凝血和脂质组学/促炎标志物反应、复苏液体(晶体液、胶体液)和血液制品的输注量,以及主要医院结局(如多器官功能障碍综合征的发生率、重症监护病房住院时间、住院时间)。
本研究是美国国防部(DoD)资助的多机构调查的一部分,与匹兹堡大学和丹佛大学独立开展但并行进行。证明院前输注血浆可显著降低死亡率以及与凝血病/炎症相关的发病率,对于 civilian 和 military人群失血性休克的管理具有相当重要的临床意义。
ClinicalTrials.gov:2014年11月28日,NCT02303964 。 (注:原文中civilian和military未给出准确中文释义,这里保留英文)