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Intravenous tranexamic acid and thromboembolic events in hip fracture surgery: A systematic review and meta-analysis - 22/03/23

Doi : 10.1016/j.otsr.2022.103337 
Gregory D. Leverett a, b, , Andrew Marriott c, d
a Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Eastern Health, Victoria, Australia 
b Department of Medicine and Veterinary Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland 
c Department of Anaesthetics, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Barwon Health, Victoria, Australia 
d Clinical Associate Professor, School of Medicine, IMPACT SRC, Deakin University, Victoria, Australia 

Corresponding author. Department of Anaesthesia, Pain and Hyperbaric Medicine, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia, 5000, Australia.Department of Anaesthesia, Pain and Hyperbaric Medicine, Royal Adelaide HospitalAdelaide, South Australia5000Australia

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Highlights

Tranexamic acid does not increase the thromboembolic risk after hip fracture surgery.
Tranexamic acid reduces blood transfusion rate after hip fracture surgery.
Tranexamic acid does not increase 90-day mortality after hip fracture surgery.

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Abstract

Background

Osteoporotic hip fractures are a major health problem in developed countries. Surgical management is the mainstay of treatment for these injuries, and historically presents an increased risk of thromboembolism, blood loss and blood transfusion. Despite the demonstrated safety of tranexamic acid (TXA) in elective hip arthroplasty, there is uncertainty regarding the risk of thromboembolism with the administration of TXA during hip fracture surgery. This study aims to address the following questions regarding patients undergoing traumatic hip fracture surgery: 1. Does intravenous TXA increase the risk of thromboembolic events? 2. Does intravenous TXA reduce peri-operative blood loss? 3. Does intravenous TXA increase the risk of non-thromboembolic complications or post-operative mortality?

Methods

A literature search of Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, PubMed, the Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials and CINAHL was conducted, assessing results from database inception until the 11th May, 2021. We included randomised controlled trials that investigated perioperative administration of intravenous TXA in patients undergoing hip fracture surgery, compared to a control cohort. We excluded articles published in a language other than English, evaluated elective hip arthroplasty, or did not report thromboembolic events. Included trials were analysed using RevMan v5.3.

Results

Sixteen articles encompassing 1491 patients met inclusion criteria. The risk difference of thromboembolic events in the TXA group was 0.02 (95%C.I. -0.01–0.04; p=0.17). TXA reduced post-operative transfusion rates by 42% (range: 28–54%, p<0.0001). The mean haemoglobin was higher in the TXA group on post-operative day one (0.77g/dL, p<0.0001), day two (0.56g/dL, p<0.0001) and day three (0.42g/dL, p<0.0001). There was no statistically significant difference in non-thromboembolic complications or post-operative mortality across the two cohorts.

Discussion

There is no conclusive evidence from the current published literature that peri-operative intravenous TXA administration increases the risk of thromboembolic events after hip fracture surgery. This meta-analysis reinforces that TXA is effective in reducing post-operative transfusions and haemoglobin decline after hip fracture surgery. This study found that TXA did not increase non-thromboembolic complications or post-operative mortality. Further large-scale studies evaluating thromboembolic complications as a primary outcome are required to definitively establish the safety of TXA in hip fracture surgery.

Level of evidence

I; meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Keywords : Tranexamic acid, Hip fractures, Thromboembolism, Blood transfusion, Meta-analysis


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Vol 109 - N° 2

Article 103337- avril 2023 Retour au numéro
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