1.
Effectiveness and safety of anti-fibrinolytic therapy in on-pump CABG
Wang J, Zhang Y, Xiao WJ, Jin L, Zhang YL, Shi J
Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi. 2017;97((40)):3147-3151.
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of anti-fibrinolytic therapy in on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Methods: Two hundred and eleven patients receiving on-pump CABG in Fuwai Hospital were recruited and randomized into treatment group (group T) and control group (group C) between October 2014 and February 2017. Tranexamic acid was given with a 10 mg/kg loading dose and 10 mg.kg(-1).h(-1) infusion dose to group T and equal volume of saline was given to group C throughout the surgery. Postoperative drainage, allogeneic transfusion, complications, adverse events and mortality were recorded. Results: Patients of group T had less postoperative drainage [860 (670, 1 190)ml vs 985 (783, 1 365)ml], decreased red blood cell [2 (0, 8)U vs 6 (2, 10)U] and fresh frozen plasma [1 (0, 3) U vs 2 (0, 3)U] transfusion volume, lower fresh frozen plasma transfusion rate (53.33% vs 70.75%) than patients of group C (all P<0.05). No statistically significant differences existed in the rate of postoperative complications, adverse events and death between the two groups (all P>0.05). Conclusion: Tranexamic acid has definite anti-fibrinolytic effect, which can significantly reduce postoperative bleeding and allogeneic transfusion while no severe side effects were observed.
2.
Meta-analysis of predictors of early severe bleeding in patients who underwent transcatheter aortic valve implantation
Sun Y, Liu X, Chen Z, Fan J, Jiang J, He Y, Zhu Q, Hu P, Wang L, Xu Q, et al
The American Journal of Cardiology. 2017;120((4):):655-661
Abstract
Severe bleeding (SB) in patients who underwent transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) could be fatal. Although multiple independent predictors of bleeding post-TAVI have been identified, the definitions of bleeding and predictors vary across studies. This study aimed to provide summary effect estimates for predictors of SB within 30 days post-TAVI. A systematic review of studies that reported the incidence of bleeding post-TAVI with raw data for predictors of interest was performed. Data on characteristics of study, patient, and procedure were extracted. Crude risk ratios (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals were calculated using random-effect model. Fifteen predictors on 65,209 patients from 47 studies were analyzed. The median rate of SB was 11% across studies. Seven factors (3 patient related and 4 procedure related) were recognized as predictors of early SB post-TAVI. Age ≥90 years (RR 1.17; p = 0.008), female (RR 1.13; p = 0.01), and sheath diameter >19 Fr (RR 1.19; p = 0.04) were weak predictors. Chronic kidney disease (RR 1.94; p <0.001) and transapical (TA) (RR 1.82; p <0.001) were moderate predictors that were almost associated with twofold risk. Vascular complication (RR 2.97; p <0.001) and circulatory support (RR 3.39; p <0.001) were strong predictors that were nearly associated with threefold risk. In conclusion, age, gender, chronic kidney disease, TA, sheath diameter, vascular complication, and circulatory support were all predictors of early SB post-TAVI in this meta-analysis, which provided possible guidance for prevention and management of SB related to TAVI.