You are a physician working at a regional trauma center. Your unit's committee, which is responsible for standardization of care, is considering using tranexamic acid to treat trauma patients arriving 3 hours after injury. Almost all the information on this topic is derived from a single, blinded trial that randomized trauma patients to tranexamic acid or placebo. The original publication reported that 99% of the enrolled patients were followed up and there was a reduction in all-cause mortality (relative risk [RR], 0.91; 95% CI. 0.85-0.97) with no apparent subgroup effect. A subsequent publication focused on an additional analysis addressing death from bleeding and reported a powerful subgroup effect with a large benefit for patients treated within 3 hours of injury and possible harm if treated 3 or more hours after injury. The committee's mandate is to decide whether tranexamic acid should not be given to patients 3 hours or more after injury. The credibility you place on the subgroup analysis will determine your decision.
John A. Kellum, Antonio Artigas, Kyle J. Gunnerson, Patrick M. Honoré, J. Patrick Kampf, Thomas Kwan, Paul McPherson, H. Bryant Nguyen, Thomas Rimmelé, Nathan I. Shapiro, Jing Shi, Jean Louis Vincent, Lakhmir S. Chawla
Masatoshi Kudo, Ho Yeong Lim, Ann‐Lii Cheng, Yee Chao, Thomas Yau, Sadahisa Ogasawara, Masayuki Kurosaki, N. Morimoto, K. Ohkawa, T. Yamashita, Ki Hoon Lee, E. Chen, A.B. Siegel, B-Y. Ryoo
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