Introduction

In trauma, the presence of coagulopathy with or without critical bleeding (CB) is associated with poorer outcomes. However in non-trauma patients, it is unknown what proportion of CB patients are coagulopathic. We aimed to characterise the presence of coagulopathy in a representative cohort of massive transfusion (MT) recipients and explore what factors, including coagulopathy, were associated with in-hospital mortality.

Methods

The Australian and New Zealand Massive Transfusion Registry (ANZ-MTR), established in 2011, collects information on CB in all clinical contexts. In the pilot phase, all adult CB patients who received a MT (defined as ≥5 units of red blood cells [RBC] in 4hrs) were identified at 9 Australian hospitals. Transfusion history, laboratory results and hospital administrative data were extracted. Coagulopathy was defined as INR >1.5 or aPTT >60 s using the most recent laboratory test results following the onset of MT (post-MT). The association between mortality and patient characteristics and therapy were explored using multiple logistic regression.

Results

A total of 1263 MT cases occurred in 1242 patients (1% had 2x MTs). Median age was 64 (IQR 49-76) years; 64% were male. The majority of cases of CB were surgical (total 55%) followed by GI bleeding (17%). Of the 1147 (91%) MT cases with an aPTT or INR result available post-MT, 37% (n=472) were coagulopathic. Of these, 44% (n=209) were also coagulopathic preceding the onset of MT (pre-MT). Of the total group, 474 (38%) had no recorded pre-MT coagulation results. Patient characteristics are presented in Table 1. Presence of coagulopathy post-MT was associated with surgical causes of CB, low post-MT Hb level, higher use of all fresh blood components, increased prothrombinex use and in-hospital mortality. Independent predictors of in-hospital mortality following multivariate logistic regression were coagulopathy (OR= 2.94; 95%CI=2.09-4.16, p<0.001), certain causes of CB including medical (mainly hem/onc & liver disease; OR= 4.63; 95%CI=1.85-11.60, p=0.001), vascular surgery (OR= 2.44; 95%CI=1.27-4.66, p=0.007), GI bleeding (OR= 2.12; 95%CI=1.31-3.43, p=0.002), liver surgery (OR= 0.40; 95%CI=0.18-0.90, p=0.03), age (OR= 1.02; 95%CI=1.01-1.03, p<0.001), and units of RBC (OR= 1.01; 95%CI=1.00-1.02, p=0.03) and cryo (OR= 1.02; 95%CI=1.00-1.03, p<0.001).

Table 1

Patient characteristics

AllMT-/CoagMT+/Coagp value
MT events (% total) 1263 (100) 675 (54) 472 (37) 
Median age (years) [IQR] 64 [49-76] 63 [48-76] 62 [50-74] 0.52 
Cause of CB n(%) trauma 188 (15) 101 (54) 65 (35) 0.22 
cardiac surgery 161 (13) 67 (42) 88 (55) <0.001 
GI 220 (17) 135 (61) 63 (29) 0.68 
obstetric 50 (4) 38 (76) 9 (18) 0.05 
vascular surgery 73 (6) 29 (40) 34 (47) 0.002 
liver surgery 100 (8) 31 (31) 69 (69) <0.001 
other surgery 364 (29) 222 (61) 112 (31) * 
Medical 43 (3) 12 (28) 15 (35) 0.03 
Post-MT Hb g/L [IQR] 77 [66-87] 78 [67-89] 73 [64-82] <0.001 
FFP:RBC (4h) [IQR] 0.7 [0.3-1.3] 0.7 [0.3-1.2] 0.9 [0.6-1.5] <0.001 
≥10u RBC in 24 hr (%) 720 (57) 362 (54) 329 (70) <0.001 
Total units RBC median [IQR] 15 [10-24] 14 [10-22] 18 [12-28] <0.001 
Total units Cryo median [IQR] 4 [0-15] 0 [0-13] 10 [0-22] <0.001 
Total units FFP median [IQR] 8 [4-18] 7 [3-15] 14 [7-25] <0.001 
Total units Plt median [IQR] 2 [0-5] 2 [0-4] 4 [2-8] <0.001 
Prothrombinex (PTX) use (%) 116 (9) 35 (5) 75 (16) <0.001 
In-hospital Mortality (%) 240 (19) 77 (11) 134 (28) <0.001 
AllMT-/CoagMT+/Coagp value
MT events (% total) 1263 (100) 675 (54) 472 (37) 
Median age (years) [IQR] 64 [49-76] 63 [48-76] 62 [50-74] 0.52 
Cause of CB n(%) trauma 188 (15) 101 (54) 65 (35) 0.22 
cardiac surgery 161 (13) 67 (42) 88 (55) <0.001 
GI 220 (17) 135 (61) 63 (29) 0.68 
obstetric 50 (4) 38 (76) 9 (18) 0.05 
vascular surgery 73 (6) 29 (40) 34 (47) 0.002 
liver surgery 100 (8) 31 (31) 69 (69) <0.001 
other surgery 364 (29) 222 (61) 112 (31) * 
Medical 43 (3) 12 (28) 15 (35) 0.03 
Post-MT Hb g/L [IQR] 77 [66-87] 78 [67-89] 73 [64-82] <0.001 
FFP:RBC (4h) [IQR] 0.7 [0.3-1.3] 0.7 [0.3-1.2] 0.9 [0.6-1.5] <0.001 
≥10u RBC in 24 hr (%) 720 (57) 362 (54) 329 (70) <0.001 
Total units RBC median [IQR] 15 [10-24] 14 [10-22] 18 [12-28] <0.001 
Total units Cryo median [IQR] 4 [0-15] 0 [0-13] 10 [0-22] <0.001 
Total units FFP median [IQR] 8 [4-18] 7 [3-15] 14 [7-25] <0.001 
Total units Plt median [IQR] 2 [0-5] 2 [0-4] 4 [2-8] <0.001 
Prothrombinex (PTX) use (%) 116 (9) 35 (5) 75 (16) <0.001 
In-hospital Mortality (%) 240 (19) 77 (11) 134 (28) <0.001 
*

reference group

Conclusion

Presence of coagulopathy early in MT varied accordingly to clinical context, with surgical causes of CB having the highest rates of coagulopathy and obstetric haemorrhage the lowest. Coagulopathy remained a predictor of in-hospital mortality independent of the clinical context. Data generated by the Australian and New Zealand Massive Transfusion Registry, provides a unique opportunity to explore differences in the pathophysiology of CB across clinical settings and the management and outcomes of this diverse patient population.

Disclosures:

Zatta:CSL Behring: Research Funding. Andrianopoulos:Monash University: Consultancy, Honoraria. Phillips:CSL Behring: Research Funding. Isbister:Johnson & Johnson: Honoraria. Wood:CSL Behring: Research Funding.

Author notes

*

Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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