AI Article Synopsis

  • Fibrinolysis shutdown (SD) is a significant risk factor for increased mortality in trauma patients, with two distinct mechanisms proposed: t-PA inhibition and inadequate t-PA release.
  • The study analyzed 398 trauma patients, finding that SD had a notably higher mortality rate (20%) compared to other fibrinolysis states, and particularly high mortality in patients not hypersensitive to t-PA.
  • Analysis revealed substantial differences in t-PA activity, PAI-1 levels, and other fibrinolytic regulators across patient phenotypes, indicating the complexity of fibrinolysis responses in trauma.

Article Abstract

Background: Fibrinolysis shutdown (SD) is an independent risk factor for increased mortality in trauma. High levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) directly binding tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) is a proposed mechanism for SD; however, patients with low PAI-1 levels present to the hospital with a rapid TEG (r-TEG) LY30 suggestive SD. We therefore hypothesized that two distinct phenotypes of SD exist, one, which is driven by t-PA inhibition, whereas another is due to an inadequate t-PA release in response to injury.

Methods: Trauma activations from our Level I center between 2014 and 2016 with blood collected within an hour of injury were analyzed with r-TEG and a modified TEG assay to quantify fibrinolysis sensitivity using exogenous t-PA (t-TEG). Using the existing r-TEG thresholds for SD (<0.9%), physiologic (LY30 0.9-2.9%), and hyperfibrinolysis (LY30 > 2.9%) patients were stratified into phenotypes. A t-TEG LY30 greater than 95th percentile of healthy volunteers (n = 140) was classified as t-PA hypersensitive and used to subdivide phenotypes. A nested cohort had t-PA and PAI-1 activity levels measured in addition to proteomic analysis of additional fibrinolytic regulators.

Results: This study included 398 patients (median New Injury Severity Score, 18), t-PA-Sen was present in 27% of patients. Shutdown had the highest mortality rate (20%) followed by hyperfibinolysis (16%) and physiologic (9% p = 0.020). In the non-t-PA hypersensitive cohort, SD had a fivefold increase in mortality (15%) compared with non-SD patients (3%; p = 0.003) which remained significant after adjusting for Injury Severity Score and age (p = 0.033). Overall t-PA activity (p = 0.002), PAI-1 (p < 0.001), and t-PA/PAI-1 complex levels (p = 0.006) differed between the six phenotypes, and 54% of fibrinolytic regulator proteins analyzed (n = 19) were significantly different.

Conclusion: In conclusion, acute fibrinolysis SD is not caused by a single etiology, and is clearly associated with PAI-1 activity. The differential phenotypes require an ongoing investigation to identify the optimal resuscitation strategy for these patients.

Level Of Evidence: Prognostic, level III.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5726780PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TA.0000000000001718DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

plasminogen activator
12
fibrinolysis shutdown
8
fivefold increase
8
increase mortality
8
mortality trauma
8
tissue plasminogen
8
pai-1 activity
8
injury severity
8
severity score
8
t-pa
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!