A lower fibrinogen threshold does not lead to increased bleeding risk in patients receiving therapeutic plasma exchange: A prospective single‐center analysis

Author:

Wodajo Amelework1ORCID,Sarode Ravi12,Valiyaparambil Shiney1,Webb Christopher1ORCID,De Simone Nicole13,Rebecca Dill1,Usmani Amena14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology UT Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

2. Department of Internal Medicine (Hematology/Oncology) Dallas Texas USA

3. Carter BloodCare Bedford Texas USA

4. Department of Pathology University of California San Diego San Diego California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPlasma exchange (PLEX) therapy is indicated for several disorders. The 5% albumin is often used as a sole replacement fluid during most PLEX. However, each 1.0 plasma volume exchange depletes coagulation factors by ~65%. Although most coagulation factors recover to hemostatic levels within 24 h post‐PLEX, fibrinogen requires 48–72 h to recover. Fibrinogen is the key coagulation protein for hemostasis. Therefore, fibrinogen is often monitored during the acute course of PLEX, and plasma is supplemented to prevent bleeding if fibrinogen is <100 mg/dL.Study Design and MethodsWe conducted a prospective, single‐center, observational study to evaluate bleeding risk in adults who received an acute course of PLEX with a fibrinogen level of 80–100 mg/dL without plasma supplementation during the procedure or before central venous catheter removal. The study group was compared to patients with plasma fibrinogen >100 mg/dL.ResultsAmong the 275 patients who received 1406 PLEXes, 62 patients (23%) who underwent 323 PLEXes met the inclusion criteria, and only 2 (3%) patients had bleeding while on oral anticoagulants. In contrast, out of 275 patients, 143 (52%) with fibrinogen levels >100 mg/dL received 751 PLEX treatments, and bleeding occurred in 2 (1%) while on low‐molecular‐weight heparin.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that a pre‐procedure fibrinogen threshold of 80–100 mg/dL without plasma supplementation does not increase bleeding risk unless patients were on anticoagulation.

Publisher

Wiley

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