Effect of fresh‐frozen plasma transfusion on prothrombin time and bleeding in patients with mild coagulation abnormalities
Top Cited Papers
- 28 July 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Transfusion
- Vol. 46 (8) , 1279-1285
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2006.00891.x
Abstract
Fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) is frequently transfused to patients with mild prolongation of coagulation values under the assumption that FFP will correct the coagulopathy. There is little evidence to support this practice, however. To determine the effect of FFP on coagulation variables and correlation with bleeding in patients with mildly prolonged coagulation values, a prospective audit of all FFP transfusions at the Massachusetts General Hospital between September 2, 2004, and September 30, 2005, was performed. All patients transfused with FFP for a pretransfusion prothrombin time (PT) between 13.1 and 17 seconds (international normalized ratio [INR], 1.1-1.85) and with a follow-up PT-INR within 8 hours of transfusion were included. Of 1091 units of FFP transfused, follow-up coagulation values within 8 hours were available for 121 patients (324 units). Transfusion of FFP resulted in normalization of PT-INR values in 0.8 percent of patients (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.0020-0.045) and decreased the PT-INR value halfway to normalization in 15.0 percent of patients (95% CI, 0.097-0.225). Median decrease in PT was 0.20 seconds (median decrease in INR, 0.07). Pretransfusion PT-INR, partial thromboplastin time, platelet count, and creatinine values had no correlation with red blood cell loss. It is concluded that transfusion of FFP for mild abnormalities of coagulation values results in partial normalization of PT in a minority of patients and fails to correct the PT in 99 percent of patients.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Paucity of studies to support that abnormal coagulation test results predict bleeding in the setting of invasive procedures: an evidence‐based reviewTransfusion, 2005
- Fresh frozen plasma is ineffective for correcting minimally elevated international normalized ratiosTransfusion, 2005
- Transfusion Medicine — Blood TransfusionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- Invasive line placement in critically ill patients: do hemostatic defects matter?Transfusion, 1996
- Lack of increased bleeding after paracentesis and thoracentesis in patients with mild coagulation abnormalitiesTransfusion, 1991
- A critical survey of fresh‐frozen plasma useTransfusion, 1986
- Bleeding after liver biopsy does not correlate with indices of peripheral coagulationDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1981
- CORRECTION OF ABNORMAL COAGULATION IN CHRONIC LIVER DISEASE BY COMBINED USE OF FRESH-FROZEN PLASMA AND PROTHROMBIN COMPLEX CONCENTRATESThe Lancet, 1976
- The use of fresh frozen plasma or a concentrate of factor IX as replacement therapy before liver biopsy.Gut, 1975
- Effect of Plasma Transfusions on the Prothrombin Time and Clotting Factors in Liver DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1966