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Are Viscoelastometric Assays of Old Generation Ready for Disposal? Comment on Volod et al. Viscoelastic Hemostatic Assays: A Primer on Legacy and New Generation Devices. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 860
by
Bareille, Marion
, Mullier, François
, Roullet, Stéphanie
, Lecompte, Thomas
in
Algorithms
/ Anticoagulants
/ Blood platelets
/ Clinical medicine
/ Comment
/ Conflicts of interest
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ Heart surgery
/ Hemorrhage
/ Human health and pathology
/ Intensive care
/ Laboratories
/ Life Sciences
/ Liver
/ Mortality
/ Trauma
/ Viscoelasticity
2023
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Are Viscoelastometric Assays of Old Generation Ready for Disposal? Comment on Volod et al. Viscoelastic Hemostatic Assays: A Primer on Legacy and New Generation Devices. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 860
by
Bareille, Marion
, Mullier, François
, Roullet, Stéphanie
, Lecompte, Thomas
in
Algorithms
/ Anticoagulants
/ Blood platelets
/ Clinical medicine
/ Comment
/ Conflicts of interest
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ Heart surgery
/ Hemorrhage
/ Human health and pathology
/ Intensive care
/ Laboratories
/ Life Sciences
/ Liver
/ Mortality
/ Trauma
/ Viscoelasticity
2023
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Are Viscoelastometric Assays of Old Generation Ready for Disposal? Comment on Volod et al. Viscoelastic Hemostatic Assays: A Primer on Legacy and New Generation Devices. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 860
by
Bareille, Marion
, Mullier, François
, Roullet, Stéphanie
, Lecompte, Thomas
in
Algorithms
/ Anticoagulants
/ Blood platelets
/ Clinical medicine
/ Comment
/ Conflicts of interest
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ Heart surgery
/ Hemorrhage
/ Human health and pathology
/ Intensive care
/ Laboratories
/ Life Sciences
/ Liver
/ Mortality
/ Trauma
/ Viscoelasticity
2023
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Are Viscoelastometric Assays of Old Generation Ready for Disposal? Comment on Volod et al. Viscoelastic Hemostatic Assays: A Primer on Legacy and New Generation Devices. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 860
Journal Article
Are Viscoelastometric Assays of Old Generation Ready for Disposal? Comment on Volod et al. Viscoelastic Hemostatic Assays: A Primer on Legacy and New Generation Devices. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 860
2023
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Overview
With the advent of new viscoelastometric hemostatic assay (VHA) devices, with ready-to-use cartridge reagents allowing for their use by people without special laboratory skills, the appreciation of the actual clinical value of VHAs in settings such as severe trauma, post-partum hemorrhage, cardiac surgery and liver transplantation still needs to be fully validated. While two of the newest versions remain based on a ‘cup and pin’ system (ROTEM® sigma, ClotPro®), two other new devices (TEG® 6s, Quantra®) rely on very different technologies: clotting blood is no longer in contact with the probe and challenged by oscillation of one of the components but explored with ultrasound exposure. A systematic literature search (including Sonoclot®) retrieved 20 observational studies (19 prospective). Most studies pointed to imperfect agreements, highlighting the non-interchangeability of devices. Only a few studies, often with a limited number of patients enrolled, used a clinical outcome. No study compared VHA results with conventional laboratory assays obtained through a rapid tests panel. Clinical evidence of the utility of the new VHAs largely remains to be proven through randomized clinical trials, with clinically relevant outcomes, and compared to rapid panel hemostasis testing. The availability of new, improved VHA devices provides an impetus and an opportunity to do so.
Publisher
MDPI AG,MDPI
Subject
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