作者
Sigismond Lasocki,Xavier Capdevila,Bruno Vielle,Benjamin Bijok,Maria Lahlou-Casulli,Vincent Collange,Nicolas Grillot,Marc Danguy des Déserts,Alexis Duchalais,Bertrand Delannoy,Bertrand Drugeon,Pierre Bouzat,Jean David,Louis Rony,Thibault Loupec,Maxime Léger,Emmanuel Rineau,G Bouhours,Sigismond Lasocki,Adeline Lebail,Maxime Léger,Elsa Parot‐Schinkel,Emmanuel Rineau,Louis Rony,Bruno Vielle,Xavier Capdevilla,Thibault Loupec,Benjamin Mounet,Fabien Swisser,Marc Danguy des Déserts,Raphaël Cinotti,Nicolas Grillot,Karim Asehnoune,Antoine Roquilly,Hélène Beloeil,Maria Lahlou-Casulli,Vincent Collange,Sébastien Parent,Bertrand Delannoy,Olivier Desebbe,Alexis Duchalais,Bertrand Drugeon,Jérémy Guenezan,Pierre Bouzat,Sabine Drevet,G. Gavazzi,Jules Grèze,Benjamin Bijok,Delphine Garrigue,Jean David
摘要
Summary
Background
Anaemia and blood transfusion are associated with poor outcomes after hip fracture. We evaluated the efficacy of intravenous iron and tranexamic acid in reducing blood transfusions after hip fracture surgery. Methods
In this double-blind, randomised, 2 × 2 factorial trial, we recruited adults hospitalised for hip fractures in 12 medical centres in France who had preoperative haemoglobin concentrations between 9·5 and 13·0 g/dL. We randomly allocated participants (1:1:1:1), via a secure web-based service, to ferric derisomaltose (20 mg/kg intravenously) and tranexamic acid (1 g bolus followed by 1 g over 8 h intravenously at inclusion and 3 g topically during surgery), iron plus placebo (normal saline), tranexamic acid plus placebo, or double placebo. Unmasked nurses administered study drugs; participants and other clinical and research staff remained masked to treatment allocation. The primary outcome was the percentage of patients transfused during hospitalisation (or by day 30). The primary analysis included all randomised patients. This study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02972294) and is closed to new participants. Findings
Of 413 patients (51–104 years old, median [IQR] 86 [78–91], 312 [76%] women, 101 [24%] men), 104 received iron plus tranexamic acid, 103 iron plus placebo, 103 tranexamic acid plus placebo, and 103 double placebo between March 31, 2017 and June 18, 2021 (study stopped early for efficacy after the planned interim analysis done on the first 390 patients included on May 25, 2021). Data for the primary outcome were available for all participants. Among patients on double placebo, 31 (30%) were transfused versus 16 (15%) on both drugs (relative risk 0·51 [98·3% CI 0·27−0·97]; p=0·012). 27 (26%) participants on iron (0·81 [0·50−1·29]; p=0·28) and 28 (27%) on tranexamic acid (0·85 [0·54−1·33]; p=0·39) were transfused. 487 adverse events were reported with similar event rates among the groups; among prespecified safety endpoints, severe postoperative anaemia (haemoglobin <8 g/dL) was more frequent in the double placebo group. Main common adverse event were sepsis, pneumonia, and urinary infection, with similar rates among all groups. Interpretation
In patients hospitalised for hip fracture surgery with a haemoglobin concentration 9·5–13·0 g/dL, preoperative infusion of ferric derisomaltose plus tranexamic acid reduced the risk of blood transfusion by 50%. Our results suggest that combining treatments from two different pillars improves patient blood-management programmes. Either treatment alone did not reduce transfusion rates, but we might not have had the power to detect it. Funding
French Ministry of Health, HiFIT trial.