Scientific Reports (May 2021)

Disseminated intravascular coagulation immediately after trauma predicts a poor prognosis in severely injured patients

  • Takeshi Wada,
  • Atsushi Shiraishi,
  • Satoshi Gando,
  • Kazuma Yamakawa,
  • Seitaro Fujishima,
  • Daizoh Saitoh,
  • Shigeki Kushimoto,
  • Hiroshi Ogura,
  • Toshikazu Abe,
  • Toshihiko Mayumi,
  • Junichi Sasaki,
  • Joji Kotani,
  • Naoshi Takeyama,
  • Ryosuke Tsuruta,
  • Kiyotsugu Takuma,
  • Norio Yamashita,
  • Shin-ichiro Shiraishi,
  • Hiroto Ikeda,
  • Yasukazu Shiino,
  • Takehiko Tarui,
  • Taka-aki Nakada,
  • Toru Hifumi,
  • Kohji Okamoto,
  • Yuichiro Sakamoto,
  • Akiyoshi Hagiwara,
  • Tomohiko Masuno,
  • Masashi Ueyama,
  • Satoshi Fujimi,
  • Yutaka Umemura,
  • Yasuhiro Otomo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90492-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Trauma patients die from massive bleeding due to disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) with a fibrinolytic phenotype in the early phase, which transforms to DIC with a thrombotic phenotype in the late phase of trauma, contributing to the development of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) and a consequently poor outcome. This is a sub-analysis of a multicenter prospective descriptive cross-sectional study on DIC to evaluate the effect of a DIC diagnosis on the survival probability and predictive performance of DIC scores for massive transfusion, MODS, and hospital death in severely injured trauma patients. A DIC diagnosis on admission was associated with a lower survival probability (Log Rank P < 0.001), higher frequency of massive transfusion and MODS and a higher mortality rate than no such diagnosis. The DIC scores at 0 and 3 h significantly predicted massive transfusion, MODS, and hospital death. Markers of thrombin and plasmin generation and fibrinolysis inhibition also showed a good predictive ability for these three items. In conclusion, a DIC diagnosis on admission was associated with a low survival probability. DIC scores obtained immediately after trauma predicted a poor prognosis of severely injured trauma patients.