Factor VIIa for intractable blood loss in trauma

Date First Published:
January 4, 2002
Last Updated:
November 11, 2002
Report by:
Jon Argall, Senior Clincal Fellow (Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Search checked by:
Stewart Teece, Manchester Royal Infirmary
Three-Part Question:
In [trauma patients with major blood loss and intractable bleeding requiring massive transfusion] does [recombinant factor VIIa] reduce [morbidity and mortalilty]
Clinical Scenario:
A 29 year old male is brought into resuscitation area having jumped out of a fourth floor window. He has abdominal and pelvic injuries but no chest, head or limb injuries. He is bleeding intractably and the orthopaedic team and surgical team cannot agree on a plan of management. You suggest that operative managment is required, they would like to perform a CT scan prior to theatre to determine who will lead the surgery. Exasperated you wonder whether factor VIIa would help to stabilise the patient and reduce his requirement for transfusion.
Search Strategy:
Medline 1966-07/02 using the OVID interface
Search Details:
[exp Factor VII OR exp Factor VIIa OR (factor adj5 VII).af OR (factor adj5 VIIa).af OR rFVIIa.af] AND [exp hemorrhage OR hemorrhage.af OR exp haemorrhage.af OR bleeding.af. OR (blood adj5 loss).af] AND [exp "Wounds and Injuries" OR trauma.af OR injur$.af OR wound$.af] LIMIT to human AND English.
Outcome:
59 papers were found of which 2 were relevant and are shown in the table.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
Treatment of traumatic bleeding with recombinant factor VIIa Kenet G, Walden, Eldad A, et al. 1999, Israel One 19 year old male soldier with life threatening bleeding from IVC Case report Mortality Slowing of blood loss and surgical control of bleeding was achieved with two doses of recombinant factor VIIa Only one case example
Recombinant activated factor VII for adjunctive haemorrhage control in trauma Martinowitz U, Kenet G, Segal E, et al. 2001, Israel Seven massively bleeding, multitransfused, coagulopathic trauma patients were treated with recombinant factor VIIa after failure of conventional methods to achieve haemostasis. Case series Reduction in transusion requirements From 25-49 units, to 1-2 units Small study
No controls
Shortening of PTR and APTT Reduction from 20-31.8 seconds, to 8-12 seconds and 46-110 seconds to 28-46 seconds respectively
Increase in factor VII levels From 0.7-0.92 IU/ml, to 18-44 IU/ml
Mortality 3 of 7 patients died of reasons other than bleeding or thromboembolism
Author Commentary:
More studies are needed.
Bottom Line:
Factor VIIa may have a role as a temporising adjunct to surgical haemostasis. Further research is needed.
References:
  1. Kenet G, Walden, Eldad A, et al.. Treatment of traumatic bleeding with recombinant factor VIIa
  2. Martinowitz U, Kenet G, Segal E, et al.. Recombinant activated factor VII for adjunctive haemorrhage control in trauma