SGEM#369: Romeo is Bleeding – Does He Need a RePHILL?
The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine - Un podcast de Dr. Ken Milne
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Date: June 18th, 2022 Reference: Crombie et al. Resuscitation with blood products in patients with trauma-related haemorrhagic shock receiving prehospital care (RePHILL): a multicentre, open-label, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial. The Lancet Haematology 2022 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Casey Parker is a Rural Generalist that includes in his practice emergency medicine, anaesthesia and critical care. He is also now a fully fledged “sonologist”. Casey currently splits his time between Broome, a small rural hospital in the remote Kimberley region of Western Australia, and a large tertiary ED in sunny Perth. Case: You are working in the emergency department (ED) and receive a call from the Advanced Care Paramedics who are at the scene of a stabbing. Apparently, two rival gangs (Jets and Sharks) had a rumble. The young man has been stabbed in the abdomen and lost a lot of blood. The patient is tachycardic (120 beats/minute), hypotensive (80/60 mmHg) and looks very pale. They have two large bore intravenous (IV) access and are planning to bring them to your ED as soon as possible. The paramedic asks you, “we have saline, and we also have red-cells and this fancy new lyophilised plasma. Should we give our shocked patient saline or plasma / red cells en route to the ED?” What do you advise him? Background: The use of fluids in trauma resuscitation has been studied in a number of trials in recent years. A lot of observational data has been collected from the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan. The Control of Major Bleeding After Trauma (COMBAT) Trial was published in the Lancet in 2018. It was a pragmatic, randomised, single-centre trial done at the Denver looking at the use of plasma in the prehospital setting. This trial did not show a statistical mortality benefit within 28 days of injury. First10EM and REBEL EM both did a review of the COMBAT trial. The Prehospital Air Medical Plasma (PAMPer) trial was published in NEJM, also in 2018. The goal of this trial was to determine the efficacy and safety of prehospital administration of thawed plasma in injured patients who are at risk for hemorrhagic shock. This trial did report that prehospital administration of plasma was safe and resulted in lower 30-day mortality. PAMPer was reviewed by First10EM and The Bottom Line. The traditional teaching in trauma is to replace blood with blood products, so we would expect that we should see a benefit if we used blood and plasma instead of saline alone for the initial resuscitation. Clinical Question: In the resuscitation of pre-hospital trauma patients with hemorrhagic shock is there a patient-oriented benefit to using blood and plasma over 0.9% saline? Reference: Crombie et al. Resuscitation with blood products in patients with trauma-related haemorrhagic shock receiving prehospital care (RePHILL): a multicentre, open-label, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial. The Lancet Haematology 2022 * Population: Adult patients 16 years of age or older suffering traumatic injury resulting in shock believed to be due to a traumatic haemorrhage. Shock was defined as a systolic BP less than 90 mmHg or an absent radial pulse. * Exclusions: Patients known to refuse blood produces,