1.
Effect of Tranexamic Acid on Blood Management during a High Tibial Osteotomy: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Fang Q, Zhang Z, Wang D, Wang L, Xiong W, Tang Y, Liu W, Wang G
Orthopaedic surgery. 2022
Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the efficiency and safety of tranexamic acid for blood management during high tibial osteotomy (HTO). A systematic search was conducted in Medline, Embase, and the Cochrane library database. Six studies and 208 patients were included in this meta-analysis using Review Manager V.5.3 and Stata 15.1 software. For primary outcomes, tranexamic acid lowered the total blood loss (WMD = -219.47, 95% CI [-355.61, -83.33], P = 0.002). For secondary outcomes, a significant reduction was found for decreased hemoglobin (POD1: WMD = -9.86, 95% CI [-13.45, -6.28], P < 0.05; POD2: WMD = -8.41, 95% CI [-11.50, -5.32], P < 0.05; POD5: WMD = -11.48, 95% CI [-14.56, -8.39], P < 0.05) and drainage (total: WMD = -105.93, 95% CI [-187.08, -24.78], P < 0.05; POD1: WMD = -122.195, 95% CI [-168.902, -75.488], P < 0.05). The sex difference (male/female ratio) was determined (total blood loss: P = 0.025; total drainage amount: p = 0.018) using meta-regression analysis. Females benefited more from tranexamic acid in terms of total blood loss (M/F > 40%: WMD = -53.11, 95% CI [-100.16, -6.05], P = 0.03; 40% ≥ M/F ≥ 20%: WMD = -362.20, 95% CI [-423.96, -300.45], P < 0.05; M/F < 20%: WMD = -263.00, 95% CI [-277.17, -248.83], P < 0.05) and total drainage (M/F > 40%: WMD = -7.11, 95% CI [-10.75, -3.47], P < 0.05; 40% ≥ M/F ≥ 20%: WMD = -104.72, 95% CI [-155.36, -54.08], P < 0.05; M/F < 20%: WMD = -222.00, 95% CI [-297.42, -146.58], P < 0.05). No significant differences were found for drainage on POD2 and POD3, wound complications, orthromboembolic events. In conclusion, tranexamic acid is effective and safe for blood management during HTO. Females appeared to benefit more from it, and an additional postoperative dose is suggested fora better effect.
2.
The efficacy and safety of multiple doses of oral tranexamic acid on blood loss, inflammatory and fibrinolysis response following total knee arthroplasty: A randomized controlled trial
Tang Y, Wen Y, Li W, Li H, Yang Y, Liu Y
International journal of surgery (London, England). 2019;65:45-51
Abstract
BACKGROUND The aim of the study was to identify the efficacy and safety of multiple doses of oral tranexamic acid (TXA) on reducing blood loss and minimizing the postoperative inflammatory and fibrinolytic responses following primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA). MATERIALS AND METHODS In this prospective, double-blinded, randomized trial, we randomly assigned a total of 151 patients into three groups to receive 2g of oral TXA 2h preoperatively (group A); an additional dose of 2g of oral TXA 4h postoperatively (group B); or additional doses of 2g of oral TXA at 4, 10, and 16h postoperatively (group C). The primary outcome was total blood loss (TBL). The secondary outcomes were maximum drop in hemoglobin (Hb) and hematocrit (Hct), level of inflammatory and fibrinolytic parameters, transfusion rate, and the incidence of complications. RESULTS The results were represented as mean+/-standard deviation. The mean TBL was 607+/-254mL in group C, 743+/-347mL in group B (p=0.027 vs group C), and 978+/-335mL in group A (p<0.001 vs group C). The maximum Hb and Hct drop was 18.3+/-7.7g/L and 0.051+/-0.025 in group C, 22.3+/-9.7g/L and 0.070+/-0.028 in group B (p=0.022 and p=0.001 vs group C), 29.6+/-11.7g/L and 0.090+/-0.034 in group A (p<0.001 and p<0.001 vs group C). In addition, C-reactive protein and interleukin-6 in group C were lower than in group A (p<0.001 and p=0.003) and in group B (p=0.031 and p<0.001) on postoperative day (POD) 3. Moreover, fibrin degradation products and D-dimer in group C were lower than in groups A and B on both POD 1 and POD 3. The incidence of complications did not differ significantly between the three groups (p>0.05). CONCLUSION Multiple postoperative doses of oral TXA could further reduced blood loss and the drop in Hb and Hct, and diminished the postoperative inflammatory and fibrinolytic responses in primary TKA with no apparent increase in the incidence of complications. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Level , therapeutic study.
3.
Tranexamic acid reduces hidden blood loss in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty: a comparative study and meta-analysis
Huang GP, Jia XF, Xiang Z, Ji Y, Wu GY, Tang Y, Li J, Zhang J
Medical Science Monitor : International Medical Journal of Experimental and Clinical Research. 2016;22:797-802.
Abstract
BACKGROUND To explore the efficacy of tranexamic acid (TXA) on reducing hidden blood loss (HBL) in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) by conducting a comparative study and meta-analysis. MATERIAL AND METHODS A total of 108 patients underwent TKA was equally distributed to experimental and control groups. The only difference between two groups was the administrations of 15 mg of TXA mixed in 100 mL normal saline for experimental group and 100 mL of normal saline for control group. The volumes of blood loss, red blood loss (RBL) were recorded, calculated and analyzed. Stata 12.0 software was applied for data analysis. RESULTS The intraoperative and postoperative blood loss volume in experimental group were remarkably reduced compared with those in control group (intraoperative: 105.1+/-12.1 mL vs. 185.5+/-20.3 mL, P<0.001; postoperative: 220.7+/-16.8 mL vs. 290.5+/-22.4 mL, P<0.001). Accordingly, the control group had significantly higher transfusion rate than experimental group (3.7% vs.25.9%, P=0.001). Our results also found that both the measured and hidden RBL were obviously reduced in experimental group compared with control group (measured RBL: 96.9+/-11.8 mL vs. 135.2+/-13.5 mL, P<0.001; hidden RBL: 170.8+/-37.2 mL vs. 364.2+/-41.5 mL, P<0.001). Furthermore, meta-analysis confirmed that TXA can notably decrease HBL (SMD=2.68, 95%CI=1.55~3.80, P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS TXA can significantly reduce the intraoperative and postoperative blood loss and HBL, therefore decreasing the transfusion need in TKA.