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. 2015 Jul 14;2015(7):CD007614. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007614.pub2

Oliver 2003.

Study characteristics
Methods Type of study: single‐centre, parallel‐group randomised controlled trial. Full‐text paper
Country: United States
Dates of trial (start and end): not reported
Follow‐up until: 24 hours postoperatively
Participants Inclusions:
1. Neonates and infants (age range not defined) undergoing open heart surgery with CPB
2. Weight 10 kg or less
Exclusions:
1. Pre‐existing haematological disease
2. Abnormal pre‐operative clotting parameters
3. Severe liver failure
4. Blood transfusion in 24 hours before operation
Age:
Intervention arm: mean 6.9 months (standard deviation 7.4 months)
Comparator arm: mean 6.6 months (standard deviation 5.9 months)
Ethnicity:
Not reported
Gender:
Intervention arm: 17 male and 11 female
Comparator arm: 14 male and 14 female
Operations:
Intervention arm: elective surgery only; 13 non‐cyanotic heart disease and 15 cyanotic heart disease
Comparator arm: elective surgery only; 17 non‐cyanotic heart disease and 11 cyanotic heart disease
Interventions Intervention arm:
Transfusion with 1 unit FFP with CPB priming intra‐operatively (n = 28)
Comparator arm:
Infusion of 200 ml 5% HAS with CPB priming intra‐operatively (n = 28)
Outcomes Primary:
Blood loss 24 hours postoperatively
Other outcomes:
1. Blood transfusion requirements in operating room and 24 hours postoperatively
2. Bleeding ('wet surgical field') 10 minutes after protamine administration
3. Prothrombin time 10 minutes after protamine administration and on arrival to ICU
4. Activated partial thromboplastin time 10 minutes after protamine administration and on arrival to ICU
5. Fibrinogen concentration 10 minutes after protamine administration
6. Thromboelastography R time 10 minutes after protamine administration
7. Thromboelastography maximum amplitude 10 minutes after protamine administration
8. Return to theatre during study period
9. Perioperative mortality
10. ICU admission duration
Notes Fibrin glue also used
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Unclear risk Quote: "Patients were randomised to receive either 200mL of albumin 5% or one unit FP in the prime for CPB" Comment: how the random sequence was generated is not described
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Unclear risk Comment: how allocation was concealed is not described. Although the patient had already been recruited to the study at the time of priming the pump, it remains possible that the treating clinician may have been aware of the group to which a patient had been allocated (e.g. visual cues, as the products look different) and may have been able to influence the allocation sequence
Blinding of participants Unclear risk Participants were neonates and infants and at this young age are likely to be unaware of their random allocation
Blinding of personnel Low risk Quote: "All personnel associated with the perioperative care of these infants and children except the perfusionists were blinded to the constitution of the prime"
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias)
All outcomes Unclear risk Insufficient information about blinding of analysts to permit judgement
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias)
All outcomes Low risk All patients analysed
Selective reporting (reporting bias) Low risk All pre‐reported outcomes analysed
Equal use of co‐interventions in each arm High risk Similar numbers of patients undergoing each type of surgery. In addition to the study intervention, patients in the control group were given 0.6 ± 0.7 units FFP whereas those in the FFP group received an additional 0.3 ± 0.5 units FFP. This may confound the outcomes. Cryoprecipitate transfusions were equal in both groups
Balance of baseline factors Low risk Similar age, weight and co‐morbidities