Abstract
In therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), large amounts of plasma with all components, including antibodies, albumin, coagulation factors and inhibitors, are removed and usually replaced with replacement fluid without coagulation factors. Hemostatic parameters should be closely monitored in patients at risk of bleeding or with large volume exchanges with a short recovery interval. In this prospective study, we compared standard coagulation parameters and the rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) point-of-care test to identify hemostatically severely compromised patients treated with TPE. 22 patients without recent or planned invasive procedures received 63 TPE treatments with regional citrate anticoagulation. One plasma volume was exchanged with replacement fluid containing albumin and electrolytes. Standard coagulation tests, fibrinogen concentration, and rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM, including EXTEM test, INTEM test, and FIBTEM test) were performed before and after each TPE treatment. Fibrinogen concentration decreased significantly and international normalized ratio increased slightly after TPE. Activated partial thromboplastin time, EXTEM, INTEM, and FIBTEM clotting times as well as clot formation times were prolonged, and maximum clot firmness decreased after TPE procedures. No serious adverse events occurred during TPE treatment. Our study showed that ROTEM parameters changed significantly after TPE performed with replacement fluid without coagulation factors. Among all parameters, FIBTEM clotting time showed the highest percentual change after TPE. According to this data, the ROTEM point-of-care test may have a potential to guide TPE therapy, particularly in patients at high risk for bleeding.
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