RESUMO
Importance: Optimal blood product transfusion strategies before tunneled central venous catheter (CVC) placement are required in critically ill coagulopathic patients with liver disease to reduce exposure to allogeneic blood products and mitigate bleeding and thrombotic complications. Objectives: This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of a thromboelastography-guided transfusion strategy for the correction of coagulopathy in patients with liver disease compared with a conventional transfusion strategy (using international normalized ratio, platelet count, and fibrinogen) before tunneled CVC insertion. Design Setting and Participants: A retrospective propensity score-matched single-center cohort study was conducted at a quaternary care academic medical center involving 364 patients with liver disease (cirrhosis and acute liver failure) who underwent tunneled CVC insertion in the ICU. Patients were stratified into two groups based on whether they received blood product transfusions based on a thromboelastography-guided or conventional transfusion strategy. Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary outcomes that were evaluated included the volume, units and cost of blood products (fresh frozen plasma, cryoprecipitate, and platelets) when using a thromboelastography-guided or conventional approach to blood transfusions. Secondary outcomes included the frequency of procedure-related bleeding and thrombotic complications. Results: The total number of units/volume/cost of fresh frozen plasma (12 U/3,000 mL/$684 vs. 32 U/7,500 mL/$1,824 [p = 0.019]), cryoprecipitate (60 U/1,500 mL/$3,240 vs. 250 U/6,250 mL/$13,500 [p < 0.001]), and platelets (5 U/1,500 mL/$2,610 vs. 13 units/3,900 mL/$6,786 [p = 0.046]) transfused were significantly lower in the thromboelastography-guided transfusion group than in the conventional transfusion group. No differences in the frequency of bleeding/thrombotic events were observed between the two groups. Conclusions and Relevance: A thromboelastography-guided transfusion strategy for correction of coagulopathy in critically ill patients with liver disease before tunneled CVC insertion, compared with a conventional transfusion strategy, reduces unnecessary exposure to allogeneic blood products and associated costs without increasing the risk for peri-procedural bleeding and thrombotic complications.
RESUMO
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (DI) refers to the reduction in the ability of the kidney to concentrate urine, which can be caused by partial or complete resistance at the site of action of anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) in the collecting tubules. Ifosfamide-induced nephrogenic DI typically occurs concomitantly in patients who have other signs of tubular toxicity consistent with Fanconi syndrome including glucosuria, aminoaciduria, and hypophosphatemia. We present a case of a 36-year-old female with recurrent synovial cell sarcoma of the pleural membranes, treated with ifosfamide-based chemotherapy, who was admitted to the hospital for the management of polyuria, hypotension, as well as electrolyte derangements including hypokalemia, hypophosphatemia and non-anion gap metabolic acidosis, 1 week after receiving a cumulative ifosfamide dose of 7.5 g/m2. Nephrogenic DI was indicated by polyuria as well as a urine osmolality to plasma osmolality ratio of less than 1.5 following a trial of intravenous desmopressin, but the patient's acute kidney injury on presentation precluded the early employment of thiazides and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Instead, the patient's polyuria and urine osmolality improved only after the administration of repetitive supraphysiologic doses of intravenous desmopressin. Our case reiterates that patients with non-hereditary nephrogenic DI may have partial rather than complete resistance to ADH and highlights that desmopressin may be considered in patients with ifosfamide-induced nephrogenic DI to prevent severe volume depletion, especially in patients who have persistent symptomatic polyuria despite maintaining a careful fluid balance and pharmacological therapy with NSAIDs and diuretics, or if the patient's clinical condition precludes the use of these strategies.