EBQ:Platelet transfusion versus standard care after acute stroke due to spontaneous cerebral haemorrhage associated with antiplatelet therapy (PATCH): a randomized, open-label, phase 3 trial
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incomplete Journal Club Article
. "Platelet transfusion versus standard care after acute stroke due to spontaneous cerebral haemorrhage associated with antiplatelet therapy (PATCH): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 trial.". Lancet. 2016. :2605-13.
PubMed Full text
PubMed Full text
Clinical Question
In patients on antiplatelet therapy with acute spontaneous primary intracranial hemorrhage, does a platelet transfusion with standard care result in reduced death or spread of the intracerebral hemorrhage compared to standard care alone?
Conclusion
- Patients who are on antiplatelet therapy who suffer from a primary intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) had increased serious adverse events during hospital stay.
- However, platelets are not routinely recommended for patients on antiplatelet therapy who have ICH.
Major Points
- Hemorrhagic stroke is responsible for half of all stroke deaths with atraumatic ICH accounting for 2.3 of hemorrhagic strokes [1][2]
- Given than over a quarter of all patients with ICH are on antiplatelet therapy and that platelet transfusions have been used in these patients 18, this study sought to do a randomized controlled trial to see if data supports its use
Study Design
- Multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel-group trial in 36 hospitals in the Netherlands, 13 hospitals in UK and 11 hospitals in France
- Randomized with number generator
- Stratified by
- type of ICH
- antiplatelet therapy whether ASA, clopidogrel, ASA+ dipyramidole, ASA +clopidogrel)
- NIHSS calculated for all patients
- Brain imaging done
- Standard care- leucocyte-depleted platelet transfusions
- Platelet transfusion initiated within 6 hours of ICH symptom onset and within 90 minutes
- One platelet for patients on ASA or ASA+dipyramidole
- Two platelets for patients on ASA+clopidogrel
- Measured Rankin score 3 months from initial platelet transfusion
- Imaging at 24 hours after randomization
- Stratified the analysis
- ICH volume size
- hospitals where treatments took place
- Adverse events
- Transfusion reactions, thrombotic complications
- Hemorrhage enlargement
- Intraventricular extension
- Hydrocephalus
- Edema
- Brain herniation
- Epileptic seizures
- Infection
Population
Patients greater than 18 on an anti-platelet agent with atraumatic ICH presenting to 60 hospitals in Netherlands, UK and France
Patient Demographics
Inclusion Criteria
- Must meet all the criteria
- 18 years or older with nontraumatic supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage confirmed by brain imaging
- GCS>8
- Platelet transfusion could be initiated within
- 6 hours of symptom onset and
- 90 min of brain imaging
- On antiplatelet therapy for at least 7 days prior either
- Aspirin, Carbasalate calcium, clopidogrel, dipyridamole
- Pre-intracerbral hemorrhage modified Rankin Scale of 0 or 1
Exclusion Criteria
- Treating physician thinks imaging suggestive of epidural or subdural hematoma
- Underlying anseurysm, AVM
- Planned surgical evacuation of ICH within 24 hours of admission
- IV blood more than sedimentation in the posterior horns of the lateral ventricles
- Previous adverse reaction to platelet transfusion
- Known use of vitamin K antagonist
- History of coagulopathy
- Known thrombocytopenia
- Lacking mental capacity by national legal standards prior to ICH
- Death appeared imminent
- Infratentorial or large IVH 2/2 likely to undergo surgical Interventions
Interventions
- 1 or 2 unit platelet transfusion
Outcomes
Primary Outcome
Death at three months or growth of ICH at three months
Secondary Outcomes
- Any adverse events
- 42% in platelet transfusion had adverse event
- 29% in standard therapy had adverse event
- ICH enlargement, brain edema, brain herniation, intraventricular extension, hydrocephalus
- Urinary or pulmonary infections
- Thromboembolism – ischemic stroke, myocardial infarction, extremity embolism, pulmonary embolism
- Transfusion reactions- nonhemolytic, anaphylactic, acute lung injury, post-transfusion purpura, graft versus host disease, transmitted bacterial infection
seizures
Subgroup analysis
Criticisms & Further Discussion
- Randomized trial of 189 participants who were taking antiplatelet therapy with atraumatic ICH
- platelet transfusion did not improve patient outcomes
- European countries (high income countries- can this be generalized to lower income countries)
- Small sample size
- most patients were on Aspirin unclear if this can be generalized to patients on only Plavix
- unknown if patients were actually compliant with medications, did it based on self report
- 19% of participants met at least one of the exclusion outcomes
External Links
See Also
Funding
References
- ↑ Al-Shahi Salman, R, Labovitz, DL, and Stapf, C. Spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage. BMJ. 2009; 339: b2586
- ↑ http://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journals/laneur/PIIS1474-4422(09)70025-0.pdf