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Title

Introduction of point‐of‐care ROTEM testing in the emergency department of an Australian level 1 trauma centre and its effect on blood product use.

Authors

Bainbridge, Frederick J; Sinha, Romi; Tocchetti, Rick; Clarke, Chris; Martin, Daniel; Foo, Ngee; Palmer, Cameron S; Ellis, Daniel Y

Abstract

Objective: To assess whether the introduction of point‐of‐care rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) analysis influences blood product transfusion and coagulation management in a modern Australian level 1 trauma centre. Methods: Retrospective blood transfusion data collection from all level 1 trauma patients with an Injury Severity Score (ISS) >12 presenting to the Royal Adelaide Hospital in 2016 and 2018. Evaluation of changes in blood product administration with the addition of point‐of‐care viscoelastic testing in the ED in 2018. Results: A total of 774 patients were analysed with 380 in 2016 and 394 in 2018. Almost a quarter of all 2018 trauma patients (93/394) had ROTEM performed within 24 h of ED arrival, 42% of these having an ISS >25. There was a significant increase in the number of patients receiving cryoprecipitate following the introduction of ROTEM (P = 0.01). In those receiving cryoprecipitate, there was a significant reduction in subsequent platelet and fresh frozen plasma use (P < 0.001). Overall, there was a reduction in expenditure on red cells, platelets and fresh frozen plasma from 2016 to 2018. Conclusion: Point‐of‐care ROTEM was performed in a small proportion of patients, mainly those with a higher ISS. ROTEM introduction in the ED altered blood product transfusion practices for major trauma patients with an ISS >12, leading to a potentially safer transfusion strategy and cost savings for key blood products.

Subjects

AUSTRALIA; KRUSKAL-Wallis Test; STATISTICS; BLOOD transfusion; TRAUMA centers; POINT-of-care testing; THROMBELASTOGRAPHY; BLOOD coagulation; REGRESSION analysis; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; CHI-squared test; DATA analysis software; DATA analysis

Publication

Emergency Medicine Australasia, 2021, Vol 33, Issue 5, p893

ISSN

1742-6731

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/1742-6723.13767

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