Artículos de revistas
Bleeding risk of surgery and its prevention in patients with inherited platelet disorders. The Surgery in Platelet disorders And Therapeutic Approach (SPATA) study
Fecha
2017-04Registro en:
Orsini, Sara; Noris, Patrizia; Bury, Loredana; Heller, Paula Graciela; Santoro, Cristina; et al.; Bleeding risk of surgery and its prevention in patients with inherited platelet disorders. The Surgery in Platelet disorders And Therapeutic Approach (SPATA) study; Ferrata Storti Foundation; Haematologica; 102; 4-2017; 1192-1203
0390-6078
1592-8721
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Orsini, Sara
Noris, Patrizia
Bury, Loredana
Heller, Paula Graciela
Santoro, Cristina
Kadir RA
Butta, Nora C.
Falcinelli, Emanuela
Cid, Ana Rosa
Fabris, Fabrizio
Fouassier, Marc
Miyazaki, Koji
Lozano, Maria Luisa
Zuñiga, Pamela
Flaujac, Claire
Podda, Gian Marco
Bermejo, Nuria
Favier, Remi
Henskens, Yvonne
De Maistre, Emmanuel
De Candia, Erica
Mumford, Andrew
Ozdemir, Gul Nihal
Eker, Ibrahim
Nurden, Paquita
Bayart, Sophie
Lambert, Michele P
Bussel, James
Zieger, Barbara
Tosseto, Alberto
Melazzini, Federica
Glembotsky, Ana Claudia
Pecci, Alessandro
Cattaneo, Marco
Schlegel, Nicole
Gresele, Paolo
Resumen
Excessive bleeding at surgery is a feared complication in patients with inherited platelet disorders (IPD), however very few studies have evaluated the frequency of surgical bleeding in these hemorrhagic disorders. We performed a multicentric, retrospective worldwide study to assess the bleeding complications of surgery, the preventive and therapeutic approaches adopted and their efficacy in patients with IPDs by rating the outcome of 829 surgical procedures carried out in 423 patients with well defined forms of IPD (238 inherited platelet function disorders -IPFD- and 185 inherited platelet number disorders-IPND-). Frequency of surgical bleeding was high in patients with IPD (19.7%), with a significantly higher bleeding incidence in IPFDs (24.8%) than in IPNDs (13.4%). The frequency of bleeding varied according to the type of IPD, with biallelic Bernard Soulier syndrome having the highest occurrence (44.4%), and was predicted by a preoperative WHO bleeding score >/-2. Some types of surgery were associated with a higher bleeding incidence, like cardiovascular and urologic surgery. The use of preoperative prohemostatic treatments was associated with a lower bleeding frequency in patients with IPFD but not in IPNDs. Desmopressin, alone or with antifibrinolytic agents, was the preventive treatment associated with lowest bleedings. Platelet transfusions were used more frequently in patients at higher bleeding risk. Surgical bleeding risk in IPD is substantial, especially in IPFDs, and bleeding history, type of disorder, type of surgery and female gender are associated with higher bleeding frequency. Prophylactic preoperative prohemostatic treatments appear to be required and associated with a lower bleeding incidence.