Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH): a randomised trial

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Standard

Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH) : a randomised trial. / Steiner, Thorsten; Poli, Sven; Griebe, Martin; Hüsing, Johannes; Hajda, Jacek; Freiberger, Anja; Bendszus, Martin; Bösel, Julian; Christensen, Hanne; Dohmen, Christian; Hennerici, Michael; Kollmer, Jennifer; Stetefeld, Henning; Wartenberg, Katja E; Weimar, Christian; Hacke, Werner; Veltkamp, Roland.

In: Lancet Neurology, Vol. 15, No. 6, 05.2016, p. 566-573.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Steiner, T, Poli, S, Griebe, M, Hüsing, J, Hajda, J, Freiberger, A, Bendszus, M, Bösel, J, Christensen, H, Dohmen, C, Hennerici, M, Kollmer, J, Stetefeld, H, Wartenberg, KE, Weimar, C, Hacke, W & Veltkamp, R 2016, 'Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH): a randomised trial', Lancet Neurology, vol. 15, no. 6, pp. 566-573. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(16)00110-1

APA

Steiner, T., Poli, S., Griebe, M., Hüsing, J., Hajda, J., Freiberger, A., Bendszus, M., Bösel, J., Christensen, H., Dohmen, C., Hennerici, M., Kollmer, J., Stetefeld, H., Wartenberg, K. E., Weimar, C., Hacke, W., & Veltkamp, R. (2016). Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH): a randomised trial. Lancet Neurology, 15(6), 566-573. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(16)00110-1

Vancouver

Steiner T, Poli S, Griebe M, Hüsing J, Hajda J, Freiberger A et al. Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH): a randomised trial. Lancet Neurology. 2016 May;15(6):566-573. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(16)00110-1

Author

Steiner, Thorsten ; Poli, Sven ; Griebe, Martin ; Hüsing, Johannes ; Hajda, Jacek ; Freiberger, Anja ; Bendszus, Martin ; Bösel, Julian ; Christensen, Hanne ; Dohmen, Christian ; Hennerici, Michael ; Kollmer, Jennifer ; Stetefeld, Henning ; Wartenberg, Katja E ; Weimar, Christian ; Hacke, Werner ; Veltkamp, Roland. / Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH) : a randomised trial. In: Lancet Neurology. 2016 ; Vol. 15, No. 6. pp. 566-573.

Bibtex

@article{e34878b713f44263bc723295452e6c8a,
title = "Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH): a randomised trial",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Haematoma expansion is a major cause of mortality in intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (VKA-ICH). Normalisation of the international normalised ratio (INR) is recommended, but optimum haemostatic management is controversial. We assessed the safety and efficacy of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) versus prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC) in patients with VKA-ICH.METHODS: We did an investigator-initiated, multicentre, prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial. Patients aged at least 18 years with VKA-ICH who presented within 12 h after symptom onset with an INR of at least 2·0 were randomly assigned (1:1) by numbered sealed envelopes to 20 mL/kg of intravenous FFP or 30 IU/kg of intravenous four-factor PCC within 1 h after initial cerebral CT scan. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with INR 1·2 or lower within 3 h of treatment initiation. Masking of treatment was not possible, but the primary analysis was observer masked. Analyses were done using a treated-as-randomised approach. This trial is registered with EudraCT, number 2008-005653-37, and ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00928915.FINDINGS: Between Aug 7, 2009, and Jan 9, 2015, 54 patients were randomly assigned (26 to FFP and 28 to PCC) and 50 received study drug (23 FFP and 27 PCC). The trial was terminated on Feb 6, 2015, after inclusion of 50 patients after a safety analysis because of safety concerns. Two (9%) of 23 patients in the FFP group versus 18 (67%) of 27 in the PCC group reached the primary endpoint (adjusted odds ratio 30·6, 95% CI 4·7-197·9; p=0·0003). 13 patients died: eight (35%) of 23 in the FFP group (five from haematoma expansion, all occurring within 48 h after symptom onset) and five (19%) of 27 in the PCC group (none from haematoma expansion), the first of which occurred on day 5 after start of treatment. Three thromboembolic events occurred within 3 days (one in the FFP group and two in the PCC group), and six after day 12 (one and five). 43 serious adverse events (20 in the FFP group and 23 in the PCC group) occurred in 26 patients. Six serious adverse events were judged to be FFP related (four cases of haematoma expansion, one anaphylactic reaction, and one ischaemic stroke) and two PCC related (ischaemic stroke and pulmonary embolism).INTERPRETATION: In patients with VKA-related intracranial hemorrhage, four-factor PCC might be superior to FFP with respect to normalising the INR, and faster INR normalisation seemed to be associated with smaller haematoma expansion. Although an effect of PCC on clinical outcomes remains to be shown, our data favour the use of PCC over FFP in intracranial haemorrhage related to VKA.FUNDING: Octapharma.",
author = "Thorsten Steiner and Sven Poli and Martin Griebe and Johannes H{\"u}sing and Jacek Hajda and Anja Freiberger and Martin Bendszus and Julian B{\"o}sel and Hanne Christensen and Christian Dohmen and Michael Hennerici and Jennifer Kollmer and Henning Stetefeld and Wartenberg, {Katja E} and Christian Weimar and Werner Hacke and Roland Veltkamp",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.",
year = "2016",
month = may,
doi = "10.1016/S1474-4422(16)00110-1",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "566--573",
journal = "The Lancet Neurology",
issn = "1474-4422",
publisher = "TheLancet Publishing Group",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fresh frozen plasma versus prothrombin complex concentrate in patients with intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (INCH)

T2 - a randomised trial

AU - Steiner, Thorsten

AU - Poli, Sven

AU - Griebe, Martin

AU - Hüsing, Johannes

AU - Hajda, Jacek

AU - Freiberger, Anja

AU - Bendszus, Martin

AU - Bösel, Julian

AU - Christensen, Hanne

AU - Dohmen, Christian

AU - Hennerici, Michael

AU - Kollmer, Jennifer

AU - Stetefeld, Henning

AU - Wartenberg, Katja E

AU - Weimar, Christian

AU - Hacke, Werner

AU - Veltkamp, Roland

N1 - Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

PY - 2016/5

Y1 - 2016/5

N2 - BACKGROUND: Haematoma expansion is a major cause of mortality in intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (VKA-ICH). Normalisation of the international normalised ratio (INR) is recommended, but optimum haemostatic management is controversial. We assessed the safety and efficacy of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) versus prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC) in patients with VKA-ICH.METHODS: We did an investigator-initiated, multicentre, prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial. Patients aged at least 18 years with VKA-ICH who presented within 12 h after symptom onset with an INR of at least 2·0 were randomly assigned (1:1) by numbered sealed envelopes to 20 mL/kg of intravenous FFP or 30 IU/kg of intravenous four-factor PCC within 1 h after initial cerebral CT scan. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with INR 1·2 or lower within 3 h of treatment initiation. Masking of treatment was not possible, but the primary analysis was observer masked. Analyses were done using a treated-as-randomised approach. This trial is registered with EudraCT, number 2008-005653-37, and ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00928915.FINDINGS: Between Aug 7, 2009, and Jan 9, 2015, 54 patients were randomly assigned (26 to FFP and 28 to PCC) and 50 received study drug (23 FFP and 27 PCC). The trial was terminated on Feb 6, 2015, after inclusion of 50 patients after a safety analysis because of safety concerns. Two (9%) of 23 patients in the FFP group versus 18 (67%) of 27 in the PCC group reached the primary endpoint (adjusted odds ratio 30·6, 95% CI 4·7-197·9; p=0·0003). 13 patients died: eight (35%) of 23 in the FFP group (five from haematoma expansion, all occurring within 48 h after symptom onset) and five (19%) of 27 in the PCC group (none from haematoma expansion), the first of which occurred on day 5 after start of treatment. Three thromboembolic events occurred within 3 days (one in the FFP group and two in the PCC group), and six after day 12 (one and five). 43 serious adverse events (20 in the FFP group and 23 in the PCC group) occurred in 26 patients. Six serious adverse events were judged to be FFP related (four cases of haematoma expansion, one anaphylactic reaction, and one ischaemic stroke) and two PCC related (ischaemic stroke and pulmonary embolism).INTERPRETATION: In patients with VKA-related intracranial hemorrhage, four-factor PCC might be superior to FFP with respect to normalising the INR, and faster INR normalisation seemed to be associated with smaller haematoma expansion. Although an effect of PCC on clinical outcomes remains to be shown, our data favour the use of PCC over FFP in intracranial haemorrhage related to VKA.FUNDING: Octapharma.

AB - BACKGROUND: Haematoma expansion is a major cause of mortality in intracranial haemorrhage related to vitamin K antagonists (VKA-ICH). Normalisation of the international normalised ratio (INR) is recommended, but optimum haemostatic management is controversial. We assessed the safety and efficacy of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) versus prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC) in patients with VKA-ICH.METHODS: We did an investigator-initiated, multicentre, prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial. Patients aged at least 18 years with VKA-ICH who presented within 12 h after symptom onset with an INR of at least 2·0 were randomly assigned (1:1) by numbered sealed envelopes to 20 mL/kg of intravenous FFP or 30 IU/kg of intravenous four-factor PCC within 1 h after initial cerebral CT scan. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with INR 1·2 or lower within 3 h of treatment initiation. Masking of treatment was not possible, but the primary analysis was observer masked. Analyses were done using a treated-as-randomised approach. This trial is registered with EudraCT, number 2008-005653-37, and ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00928915.FINDINGS: Between Aug 7, 2009, and Jan 9, 2015, 54 patients were randomly assigned (26 to FFP and 28 to PCC) and 50 received study drug (23 FFP and 27 PCC). The trial was terminated on Feb 6, 2015, after inclusion of 50 patients after a safety analysis because of safety concerns. Two (9%) of 23 patients in the FFP group versus 18 (67%) of 27 in the PCC group reached the primary endpoint (adjusted odds ratio 30·6, 95% CI 4·7-197·9; p=0·0003). 13 patients died: eight (35%) of 23 in the FFP group (five from haematoma expansion, all occurring within 48 h after symptom onset) and five (19%) of 27 in the PCC group (none from haematoma expansion), the first of which occurred on day 5 after start of treatment. Three thromboembolic events occurred within 3 days (one in the FFP group and two in the PCC group), and six after day 12 (one and five). 43 serious adverse events (20 in the FFP group and 23 in the PCC group) occurred in 26 patients. Six serious adverse events were judged to be FFP related (four cases of haematoma expansion, one anaphylactic reaction, and one ischaemic stroke) and two PCC related (ischaemic stroke and pulmonary embolism).INTERPRETATION: In patients with VKA-related intracranial hemorrhage, four-factor PCC might be superior to FFP with respect to normalising the INR, and faster INR normalisation seemed to be associated with smaller haematoma expansion. Although an effect of PCC on clinical outcomes remains to be shown, our data favour the use of PCC over FFP in intracranial haemorrhage related to VKA.FUNDING: Octapharma.

U2 - 10.1016/S1474-4422(16)00110-1

DO - 10.1016/S1474-4422(16)00110-1

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27302126

VL - 15

SP - 566

EP - 573

JO - The Lancet Neurology

JF - The Lancet Neurology

SN - 1474-4422

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 177289324