Journal article

Combined Administration of Fibrinogen and Factor XIII Concentrate Does Not Improve Dilutional Coagulopathy Superiorly Than Sole Fibrinogen Therapy: Results of an In-Vitro Thrombelastographic Study


Authors listSchneck, Emmanuel; Muelich, Marcus; Markmann, Melanie; Edinger, Fabian; Cooper, Nina; Moeller, Annette; Bein, Gregor; Hecker, Andreas; Koch, Christian; Sander, Michael; Wolff, Matthias

Publication year2021

JournalJournal of Clinical Medicine

Volume number10

Issue number10

eISSN2077-0383

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10102068

PublisherMDPI


Abstract
The early administration of fibrinogen has gained wide acceptance for the treatment of major hemorrhage, whereas the substitution of coagulation factor XIII (FXIII) is only supported by a low level of evidence. This study aimed to answer the question of whether a combined therapy of fibrinogen/FXIII substitution performs superiorly to sole fibrinogen administration in the treatment of dilutional coagulopathy. An in-vitro model of massive transfusion was used to compare the effect of combined fibrinogen/FXIII administration to that of sole fibrinogen therapy for the treatment of dilutional coagulopathy. For this purpose, the blood of red blood cell concentrates, fresh frozen plasma, and platelet concentrates were reconstituted in a ratio of 4:4:1, and then diluted with gelatin by 20% and 40%, respectively. Clot formation and stability were analyzed by thrombelastography. Both sole fibrinogen therapy (equivalent to 50 mg/kg) and the combined administration of fibrinogen (equivalent to 50 mg/kg) and FXIII (equivalent to 75 International Units (IU)/kg) increased fibrinogen-dependent mean clot firmness independently of the degree of dilution (20% dilution: 7 (6.3-7.8) mm; 20% dilution fibrinogen: 13.5 (13-17.3) mm; 20% dilution fibrinogen/FXIII: 16.5 (15.3-18.8) mm; 40% dilution: 3 (2-3.8) mm; 40% dilution fibrinogen: 8 (7-11.3) mm; 40% dilution fibrinogen/FXIII: 10 (8.3-11.8) mm; all p < 0.01). However, no differences were identified between the two treatment arms. Compared to fibrinogen therapy, no beneficial effect of the combined administration of fibrinogen and FXIII for the treatment of dilutional coagulopathy was detected in this in-vitro massive transfusion model. The result was independent of the degree of dilution.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleSchneck, E., Muelich, M., Markmann, M., Edinger, F., Cooper, N., Moeller, A., et al. (2021) Combined Administration of Fibrinogen and Factor XIII Concentrate Does Not Improve Dilutional Coagulopathy Superiorly Than Sole Fibrinogen Therapy: Results of an In-Vitro Thrombelastographic Study, Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(10), Article 2068. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10102068

APA Citation styleSchneck, E., Muelich, M., Markmann, M., Edinger, F., Cooper, N., Moeller, A., Bein, G., Hecker, A., Koch, C., Sander, M., & Wolff, M. (2021). Combined Administration of Fibrinogen and Factor XIII Concentrate Does Not Improve Dilutional Coagulopathy Superiorly Than Sole Fibrinogen Therapy: Results of an In-Vitro Thrombelastographic Study. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 10(10), Article 2068. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10102068



Keywords


COAGULATIONHYPOTHERMIAimpedance aggregometrymajor bleedingthrombelastometryTHROMBOELASTOMETRY

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:25