Prevalence of Survivor Bias in Observational Studies on Fresh Frozen Plasma

Author:

Ho Anthony M.-H.1,Dion Peter W.2,Yeung Janice H. H.3,Holcomb John B.4,Critchley Lester A. H.1,Ng Calvin S. H.5,Karmakar Manoj K.6,Cheung Chi W.7,Rainer Timothy H.8,Warner David S.

Affiliation:

1. Professor.

2. Consultant, Department of Anaesthesia, St. Catharines General Hospital, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada.

3. Trauma Nurse Coordinator, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong SAR.

4. Professor of Surgery, Director, Center for Translational Injury Research, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas.

5. Associate Consultant, Department of Surgery.

6. Associate Professor, Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care.

7. Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Anaesthesiology, University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong SAR.

8. Director, Accident and Emergency Medicine Academic Unit, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong SAR.

Abstract

Observational studies on transfusion in trauma comparing high versus low plasma:erythrocyte ratio were prone to survivor bias because plasma administration typically started later than erythrocytes. Therefore, early deaths were categorized in the low plasma:erythrocyte group, whereas early survivors had a higher chance of receiving a higher ratio. When early deaths were excluded, however, a bias against higher ratio can be created. Survivor bias could be reduced by performing before-and-after studies or treating the plasma:erythrocyte ratio as a time-dependent covariate.We reviewed 26 studies on blood ratios in trauma. Fifteen of the studies were survivor bias-unlikely or biased against higher ratio; among them, 10 showed an association between higher ratio and improved survival, and five did not. Eleven studies that were judged survivor bias-prone favoring higher ratio suggested that a higher ratio was superior.Without randomized controlled trials controlling for survivor bias, the current available evidence supporting higher plasma:erythrocyte resuscitation is inconclusive.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference55 articles.

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