Article (Scientific journals)
Early identification of trauma patients in need for emergent transfusion: results of a single-center retrospective study evaluating three scoring systems.
SWERTS, Frédéric; MATHONET, Pierre-Yves; Ghuysen, Alexandre et al.
2018In European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery
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Keywords :
Blood products transfusion; Coagulopathy; Prehospital care; Trauma
Abstract :
[en] BACKGROUND: The Trauma-Induced Coagulopathy Clinical Score (TICCS) was developed to be calculable on the site of injury to discriminate between trauma patients with or without the need for damage control resuscitation and thus transfusion. This early alert could then be translated to in-hospital parameters at patient arrival. Base excess (BE) and ultrasound (FAST) are known to be predictive parameters for emergent transfusion. We emphasize that adding these two parameters to the TICCS could improve the scoring system predictability. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted in the University Hospital of Liege. TICCS was calculated for every patient. BE and FAST results were recorded and points were added to the TICCS according to the TICCS.BE definition (+ 3 points if BE < - 5 and + 3 points in case of a positive FAST). Emergent transfusion was defined as the use of at least one blood product in the resuscitation room. The capacity of the TICCS, the TICCS.BE and the Trauma-Associated Severe Hemorrhage (TASH) to predict emergent transfusion was assessed. RESULTS: A total of 328 patients were included. Among them, 14% needed emergent transfusion. The probability for emergent transfusion grows with the TICCS and the TICCS.BE values. We did not find a significant difference between the TICCS (AUC 0.73) and the TICCS.BE (AUC 0.76). The TASH proved to be more predictive (AUC 0.89). 66.6% of the patients with a TICCS >/= 10 and 81.5% with a TICCS.BE >/= 14 required emergent transfusion. CONCLUSION: Adding BE and FAST to the original TICCS does not significantly improve the scoring system predictability. A prehospital TICCS > 10 could be used as a trigger for emergent transfusion activation. TASH could then be used at hospital arrival. Prehospital TASH calculation may be possible but should be further investigated. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Diagnostic test, level III.
Disciplines :
Human health sciences: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Author, co-author :
SWERTS, Frédéric ;  Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège - CHU > Autres Services Médicaux > Service des urgences
MATHONET, Pierre-Yves ;  Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège - CHU > Département de médecine interne > Service de diabétologie, nutrition, maladies métaboliques
Ghuysen, Alexandre ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences de la santé publique > Simulation médicale en situation critique
D'Orio, Vincenzo ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences cliniques > Médecine d'urgence - bioch. et phys. hum. normales et path.
Minon, Jean-Marc
Tonglet, Martin 
Language :
English
Title :
Early identification of trauma patients in need for emergent transfusion: results of a single-center retrospective study evaluating three scoring systems.
Publication date :
2018
Journal title :
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery
ISSN :
1863-9933
eISSN :
1863-9941
Publisher :
Urban & Vogel GmbH, Germany
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 09 January 2020

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