1. Platelet versus fresh frozen plasma transfusion for coagulopathy in cardiac surgery patients.
- Author
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Jake V Hinton, Calvin M Fletcher, Luke A Perry, Noah Greifer, Jessica N Hinton, Jenni Williams-Spence, Reny Segal, Julian A Smith, Christopher M Reid, Laurence Weinberg, and Rinaldo Bellomo
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundPlatelets (PLTS) and fresh frozen plasma (FFP) are often transfused in cardiac surgery patients for perioperative bleeding. Their relative effectiveness is unknown.MethodsWe conducted an entropy-weighted retrospective cohort study using the Australian and New Zealand Society of Cardiac and Thoracic Surgeons National Cardiac Surgery Database. All adults undergoing cardiac surgery between 2005-2021 across 58 sites were included. The primary outcome was operative mortality.ResultsOf 174,796 eligible patients, 15,360 (8.79%) received PLTS in the absence of FFP and 6,189 (3.54%) patients received FFP in the absence of PLTS. The median cumulative dose was 1 unit of pooled platelets (IQR 1 to 3) and 2 units of FFP (IQR 0 to 4) respectively. After entropy weighting to achieve balanced cohorts, FFP was associated with increased perioperative (Risk Ratio [RR], 1.63; 95% Confidence Interval [CI], 1.40 to 1.91; PConclusionIn perioperative bleeding in cardiac surgery patient, platelets are associated with a relative mortality benefit over FFP. This information can be used by clinicians in their choice of procoagulant therapy in this setting.
- Published
- 2024
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