Cornelius Brian G, McCarty Karen, Hylan Kristi, Cornelius Angela, Carter Keith, Smith Kenneth W G, Ristic Srdan, Vining Daniel, Cvek Urska, Trutschl Marjan
Department of Anesthesia, University Health-Shreveport, Shreveport, Louisiana (Drs Cornelius and Hylan); Capstone College of Nursing, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa (Drs Cornelius and McCarty); Department of Emergency Medicine, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport (Dr Cornelius); Pafford Air One, Ruston, Louisiana (Mr Carter); and Laboratory for Advanced Biomedical Informatics, Department of Computer Science, Louisiana State University-Shreveport (Messrs Smith, Ristic, and Vining and Drs Cvek and Trutschl).
Adv Emerg Nurs J. 2018 Jan/Mar;40(1):27-35. doi: 10.1097/TME.0000000000000175.
The MATTERs and CRASH-2 studies demonstrate that tranexamic acid (TXA) reduces mortality in patients with traumatic hemorrhage. However, their results, conducted in foreign countries and with U.S. military soldiers, provoke concerns over generalizability to civilian trauma patients in the United States was reported. The evaluation of patient outcomes following treatment with TXA by a civilian air medical program. A retrospective chart review of trauma patients transported by air service to a Level 1 trauma center was conducted. For the purposes of intervention evaluation, patients meeting this criterion for the 2 years (2012-2014) prior to therapy implementation were compared with patients treated during the 2-year study period (2014-2016). Goals were to evaluate morbidity, mortality, and length of stay. During the review, 82 control and 49 study patients were identified as meeting inclusion criteria. Patients in the control group were found to be less acute, which correlated with shorter hospital stays and better discharge outcomes. Multiple patients in the study group who should have expired according to a significantly elevated Trauma Revised Injury Severity Score (TRISS) survived, whereas multiple patients in the control group expired despite a low TRISS calculation. This is the first outcome-based study conducted in a U.S. trauma system. The outcomes in civilian trauma patients in the United States do not follow that of the previous MATTERs and CRASH-2 studies. However, this study still shows benefit to TXA administration and reduced risk for administration to patients with head trauma and occurrence of venous thromboembolism. Randomized control trials are needed to evaluate the role of TXA administration in the United States.
MATTERs研究和CRASH - 2研究表明,氨甲环酸(TXA)可降低创伤性出血患者的死亡率。然而,据报道,这些在国外针对美国军事人员开展的研究结果引发了人们对其在美国 civilian创伤患者中的可推广性的担忧。一项关于 civilian空中医疗项目使用TXA治疗后患者结局的评估。对通过空中医疗服务转运至一级创伤中心的创伤患者进行了回顾性病历审查。为了进行干预评估,将在治疗实施前两年(2012 - 2014年)符合该标准的患者与两年研究期(2014 - 2016年)内接受治疗的患者进行了比较。目标是评估发病率、死亡率和住院时间。在审查过程中,确定82名对照患者和49名研究患者符合纳入标准。发现对照组患者病情较轻,这与较短的住院时间和较好的出院结局相关。根据显著升高的创伤修正损伤严重度评分(TRISS)本应死亡的研究组中的多名患者存活了下来,而对照组中的多名患者尽管TRISS计算值较低却死亡了。这是在美国创伤系统中进行的第一项基于结局的研究。美国 civilian创伤患者的结局与之前的MATTERs研究和CRASH - 2研究不同。然而,这项研究仍然表明TXA给药有益,且降低了头部创伤患者给药的风险以及静脉血栓栓塞的发生率。需要进行随机对照试验来评估TXA给药在美国的作用。