Estcourt Lise, Stanworth Simon, Doree Carolyn, Hopewell Sally, Murphy Michael F, Tinmouth Alan, Heddle Nancy
Haematology/Transfusion Medicine, NHS Blood and Transplant, Oxford, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 May 16;2012(5):CD004269. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004269.pub3.
Platelet transfusions are used in modern clinical practice to prevent and treat bleeding in thrombocytopenic patients with bone marrow failure. Although considerable advances have been made in platelet transfusion therapy in the last 40 years, some areas continue to provoke debate especially concerning the use of prophylactic platelet transfusions for the prevention of thrombocytopenic bleeding.
To determine the most effective use of platelet transfusion for the prevention of bleeding in patients with haematological disorders undergoing chemotherapy or stem cell transplantation.
This is an update of a Cochrane review first published in 2004. We searched for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL Issue 4, 2011), MEDLINE (1950 to Nov 2011), EMBASE (1980 to Nov 2011) and CINAHL (1982 to Nov 2011), using adaptations of the Cochrane RCT search filter, the UKBTS/SRI Transfusion Evidence Library, and ongoing trial databases to 10 November 2011.
RCTs involving transfusions of platelet concentrates, prepared either from individual units of whole blood or by apheresis, and given to prevent bleeding in patients with haematological disorders. Four different types of prophylactic platelet transfusion trial were included.
In the original review one author initially screened all electronically derived citations and abstracts of papers, identified by the review search strategy, for relevancy. Two authors performed this task in the updated review. Two authors independently assessed the full text of all potentially relevant trials for eligibility. Two authors completed data extraction independently. We requested missing data from the original investigators as appropriate.
There were 18 trials that were eligible for inclusion, five of these were still ongoing.Thirteen completed published trials (2331 participants) were included for analysis in the review. The original review contained nine trials (718 participants). This updated review includes six new trials (1818 participants).Two trials (205 participants) in the original review are now excluded because fewer than 80% of participants had a haematological disorder.The four different types of prophylactic platelet transfusion trial, that were the focus of this review, were included within these thirteen trials.Three trials compared prophylactic platelet transfusions versus therapeutic-only platelet transfusions. There was no statistical difference between the number of participants with clinically significant bleeding in the therapeutic and prophylactic arms but the confidence interval was wide (RR 1.66; 95% CI 0.9 to 3.04).The time taken for a clinically significant bleed to occur was longer in the prophylactic platelet transfusion arm. There was a clear reduction in platelet transfusion usage in the therapeutic arm. There was no statistical difference between the number of participants in the therapeutic and prophylactic arms with platelet refractoriness, the only adverse event reported.Three trials compared different platelet count thresholds to trigger administration of prophylactic platelet transfusions. No statistical difference was seen in the number of participants with clinically significant bleeding (RR 1.35; 95% CI 0.95 to 1.9), however, this type of bleeding occurred on fewer days in the group of patients transfused at a higher platelet count threshold (RR 1.72; 95% CI 1.33 to 2.22).The lack of a difference seen for the number of participants with clinically significant bleeding may be due to the studies, in combination, having insufficient power to demonstrate a difference, or due to masking of the effect by a higher number of protocol violations in the groups of patients with a lower platelet count threshold. Using a lower platelet count threshold led to a significant reduction in the number of platelet transfusions used. There were no statistical differences in the number of adverse events reported between the two groups.Six trials compared different doses of prophylactic platelet transfusions. There was no evidence to suggest that using a lower platelet transfusion dose increased: the number of participants with clinically significant (WHO grade 2 or above) (RR 1.02; 95% CI 0.93 to 1.11), or life-threatening (WHO grade 4) bleeding (RR 1.87; 95% CI 0.86 to 4.08). A higher platelet transfusion dose led to a reduction in the number of platelet transfusion episodes, but an increase in total platelet utilisation. Only one adverse event, wheezing after transfusion, had a significantly higher incidence when standard and high dose transfusions were compared but this difference was not seen when low dose and high dose transfusions were compared. It is therefore likely to be a type I error (false positive).One small trial compared prophylactic platelet transfusions versus platelet-poor plasma. The risk of a significant bleed was decreased in the prophylactic platelet transfusion arm (RR 0.47; 95% CI 0.23 to 0.95) and this was statistically significant.All studies had threats to validity; the majority of these were due to methodology of the studies not being described in adequate detail.Although it was not the main focus of the review, it was interesting to note that in one of the pre-specified sub-group analyses (treatment type) two studies showed that patients receiving an autologous transplant have a lower risk of bleeding than patients receiving intensive chemotherapy or an allogeneic transplant (RR 0.73, 95% CI 0.65 to 0.82).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: These conclusions refer to the four different types of platelet transfusion trial separately. Firstly, there is no evidence that a prophylactic platelet transfusion policy prevents bleeding. Two large trials comparing a therapeutic versus prophylactic platelet transfusion strategy, that have not yet been published, should provide important new data on this comparison. Secondly, there is no evidence, at the moment, to suggest a change from the current practice of using a platelet count of 10 x 10(9)/L. However, the evidence for a platelet count threshold of 10 x 10(9)/L being equivalent to 20 x 10(9)/L is not as definitive as it would first appear and further research is required. Thirdly, platelet dose does not affect the number of patients with significant bleeding, but whether it affects number of days each patient bleeds for is as yet undetermined. There is no evidence that platelet dose affects the incidence of WHO grade 4 bleeding.Prophylactic platelet transfusions were more effective than platelet-poor plasma at preventing bleeding.
在现代临床实践中,血小板输注用于预防和治疗骨髓衰竭的血小板减少患者的出血。尽管在过去40年里血小板输注治疗取得了显著进展,但有些领域仍存在争议,尤其是关于预防性血小板输注用于预防血小板减少性出血的问题。
确定血小板输注在预防接受化疗或干细胞移植的血液系统疾病患者出血方面的最有效用法。
这是对2004年首次发表的Cochrane综述的更新。我们在Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL 2011年第4期)、MEDLINE(1950年至2011年11月)、EMBASE(1980年至2011年11月)和CINAHL(1982年至2011年11月)中检索随机对照试验(RCT),使用Cochrane RCT检索过滤器、UKBTS/SRI输血证据库的改编版以及截至2011年11月10日的正在进行的试验数据库。
涉及输注由单个全血单位制备或通过单采术制备的血小板浓缩物,用于预防血液系统疾病患者出血的RCT。纳入了四种不同类型的预防性血小板输注试验。
在最初的综述中,由一位作者最初筛选所有通过综述检索策略识别的电子衍生文献引用和论文摘要的相关性。在更新的综述中由两位作者执行此任务。两位作者独立评估所有潜在相关试验的全文是否符合纳入标准。两位作者独立完成数据提取。我们在适当时向原始研究者索取缺失数据。
有18项试验符合纳入标准,其中5项仍在进行中。纳入综述分析的有13项已完成发表的试验(2331名参与者)。最初的综述包含9项试验(718名参与者)。本次更新的综述纳入了6项新试验(1818名参与者)。最初综述中的两项试验(205名参与者)现被排除,因为不到80%的参与者患有血液系统疾病。本次综述重点关注的四种不同类型的预防性血小板输注试验包含在这13项试验中。三项试验比较了预防性血小板输注与仅治疗性血小板输注。治疗组和预防组中发生具有临床意义出血的参与者数量无统计学差异,但置信区间较宽(风险比1.66;95%置信区间0.9至3.04)。预防性血小板输注组发生具有临床意义出血的时间更长。治疗组的血小板输注使用量明显减少。治疗组和预防组中出现血小板输注无效(唯一报告的不良事件)的参与者数量无统计学差异。三项试验比较了触发预防性血小板输注的不同血小板计数阈值。具有临床意义出血的参与者数量无统计学差异(风险比1.35;95%置信区间0.95至1.9),然而,在血小板计数阈值较高的患者组中,这种类型的出血发生天数较少(风险比1.72;95%置信区间1.33至2.22)。具有临床意义出血的参与者数量无差异可能是由于这些研究综合起来效力不足无法证明差异,或者是由于血小板计数阈值较低的患者组中方案违规数量较多掩盖了效果。使用较低的血小板计数阈值导致血小板输注使用量显著减少。两组报告的不良事件数量无统计学差异。六项试验比较了不同剂量的预防性血小板输注。没有证据表明使用较低的血小板输注剂量会增加:具有临床意义(WHO 2级或以上)出血的参与者数量(风险比1.02;95%置信区间0.93至1.11),或危及生命(WHO 4级)出血的参与者数量(风险比1.87;95%置信区间0.86至4.08)。较高的血小板输注剂量导致血小板输注次数减少,但总血小板利用率增加。仅一项不良事件,即输血后喘息,在比较标准剂量和高剂量输血时发生率显著较高,但在比较低剂量和高剂量输血时未观察到这种差异。因此这可能是I类错误(假阳性)。一项小型试验比较了预防性血小板输注与少血小板血浆。预防性血小板输注组发生显著出血的风险降低(风险比0.47;95%置信区间0.23至0.95),且具有统计学意义。所有研究都存在对效度的威胁;其中大多数是由于研究方法未详细描述。尽管这不是综述的主要重点,但有趣的是,在一项预先指定的亚组分析(治疗类型)中,两项研究表明接受自体移植的患者出血风险低于接受强化化疗或同种异体移植的患者(风险比0.73,95%置信区间0.65至0.82)。
这些结论分别针对四种不同类型的血小板输注试验。首先,没有证据表明预防性血小板输注策略可预防出血。两项比较治疗性与预防性血小板输注策略的大型试验尚未发表,应会提供关于此比较的重要新数据。其次,目前没有证据表明应改变当前使用血小板计数10×10⁹/L的做法。然而,血小板计数阈值为10×10⁹/L等同于20×10⁹/L的证据并不像最初看起来那样确凿,需要进一步研究。第三,血小板剂量不影响有显著出血的患者数量,但它是否影响每位患者的出血天数尚未确定。没有证据表明血小板剂量会影响WHO 4级出血的发生率。预防性血小板输注在预防出血方面比少血小板血浆更有效。