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. 2015 Jan 23;2015(1):CD007379. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007379.pub2

Bowley 2006.

Methods Randomised controlled trial
Participants Participants: 44 participants (21 allocated to intervention group; 23 to control)
Age: range 20 to 54 years (median 30 years)
Demographics: 40 of 44 participants were male. Other demographics as well as injury patterns and severity were apparently equivalent at baseline between the two groups
Unit of allocation: individual
Number randomised: 44
Number completing: 15 survived; 29 died
Setting: Johannesburg Hospital Trauma Unit, Dept of Surgery, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. Study recruited within the first seven months of 2002
Inclusion criteria: Participants were "assessed on arrival in the Emergency Room by a single investigator and enrolled in the study if they had penetrating torso injury requiring a laparotomy and had exhibited hypotension (< 90 mmHg) either pre‐hospital or on arrival and in whom there was considered to be significant blood loss" (p. 1075)
Exclusion criteria: Participants aged < 18 years; participants with injuries > 6 hours old.
Interventions Intervention (n = 21): the intervention group underwent cell salvage using a Cell Saver 4 machine (Haemonetics, Braintree, MA, USA) with transfusion of both autologous and allogeneic blood as required
Control (n = 23): allogeneic blood transfusion at the discretion of the attending medical staff
Outcomes Primary
Exposure to allogeneic blood up to the first 24 hours postinjury
Secondary
Mortality (all cause and cause‐specific (e.g. multiorgan failure or exsanguination)
Postoperative sepsis
Costs
Notes  
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Low risk Randomisation was by computer‐generated random number tables
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Low risk Allocation was concealed by means of envelopes which contained dedicated data collection sheets
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) 
 All outcomes High risk It is not feasible to blind this intervention to personnel
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) 
 All outcomes High risk Insufficient information was available in the published paper to determine this. Contact with the primary investigator indicates no attempts at blinding outcome assessors to outcomes e.g. postoperative sepsis
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk No data were missing from this study
Selective reporting (reporting bias) Unclear risk Contact with trial investigator has established that no trial protocol exists (Bowley 2006)
Other bias Low risk No other sources identified