Do Antifibrinolytics Reduce Allogeneic Blood Transfusion in Orthopedic Surgery?

Author:

Zufferey Paul1,Merquiol Fanette2,Laporte Silvy2,Decousus Hervé3,Mismetti Patrick3,Auboyer Christian4,Samama Charles Marc5,Molliex Serge4,Warltier David C.

Affiliation:

1. Staff Physician, Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care and EA3065, Thrombosis Research Group, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University Hospital of Saint-Etienne.

2. Assistant Professor.

3. Professor, EA3065, Thrombosis Research Group, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University Hospital of Saint-Etienne.

4. Professor, Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, University Hospital of Saint-Etienne.

5. Professor, Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Avicenne Hospital, Bobigny, France.

Abstract

Studies have shown that antifibrinolytic (aprotinin, tranexamic acid, epsilon-aminocaproic acid) reduce blood loss in orthopedic surgery. However, most lacked sufficient power to evaluate the efficacy and safety on clinical outcomes. This meta-analysis aims to evaluate whether intravenous antifibrinolytics, when compared with placebo, reduce perioperative allogeneic erythrocyte transfusion requirement in adults undergoing orthopedic surgery and whether it might increase the risk of venous thromboembolism. From MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, the authors identified 43 randomized controlled trials in total hip and knee arthroplasty, spine fusion, musculoskeletal sepsis, or tumor surgery performed to July 2005 (for aprotinin, 23 trials with 1,268 participants; tranexamic acid, 20 with 1,084; epsilon-aminocaproic acid, 4 with 171). Aprotinin and tranexamic acid reduced significantly the proportion of patients requiring allogeneic erythrocyte transfusion according to a transfusion protocol. The odds ratio was 0.43 (95% confidence interval, 0.28-0.64) for aprotinin and 0.17 (0.11-0.24) for tranexamic acid. Results suggest a dose-effect relation with tranexamic acid. Epsilon-aminocaproic acid was not efficacious. Unfortunately, data were too limited for any conclusions regarding safety. Although the results suggest that aprotinin and tranexamic acid significantly reduce allogeneic erythrocyte transfusion, further evaluation of safety is required before recommending the use of antifibrinolytics in orthopedic surgery.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference80 articles.

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