Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>For patients with a normal coagulation system, who experience serious bleeding, sound evidence for recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) as an effective haemostatic agent is only scarcely available so far from controlled clinical...

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Main Authors: Wiedermann CJ, Pechlaner C, Eller P
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2006-01-01
Series:Thrombosis Journal
Online Access:http://www.thrombosisjournal.com/content/4/1/1
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spelling doaj-ee6fc1995d4a44c28adbc2954eac490c2020-11-24T23:02:01ZengBMCThrombosis Journal1477-95602006-01-0141110.1186/1477-9560-4-1Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleedingWiedermann CJPechlaner CEller P<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>For patients with a normal coagulation system, who experience serious bleeding, sound evidence for recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) as an effective haemostatic agent is only scarcely available so far from controlled clinical trials. In systematic reviews on the clinical use of rFVIIa, treatment failures were only rarely reported.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>We present a 45-year old, Caucasian male with persistent intestinal bleeding due to enterocolitis associated with cytomegalovirus infection and acute graft-versus-host-disease. He had received allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation from an unrelated HLA-identical donor because of chronic myelogenous leukaemia diagnosed two years earlier. Bleeding started at day 18 after transplantation with bloody diarrhea, which was treated with multiple transfusions of fresh frozen plasma, platelet, and red blood cell concentrates, and continued relentlessly, despite all efforts, including continued transfusions, high-dose prednisolone, broad antibiotic and antiviral coverage, and tranexamic acid. Recombinant FVIIa was started at boluses of 90–120 μg/kg every 4–8 hours. Despite more than 10 doses, recurrent severe bleeding progressed to refractory shock, multiorgan failure and death.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Little can be concluded from single case reports of clinical improvement, because publication bias in favour of positive effects is likely. Our case suggests that rFVIIa is not a panacea, in particular for severe bleeding after bone-marrow transplantation. As long as rigorous, controlled studies or comprehensive registries are lacking, conventional interventions remain the standard of care in non-haemophilic patients with severe bleeding.</p> http://www.thrombosisjournal.com/content/4/1/1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wiedermann CJ
Pechlaner C
Eller P
spellingShingle Wiedermann CJ
Pechlaner C
Eller P
Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding
Thrombosis Journal
author_facet Wiedermann CJ
Pechlaner C
Eller P
author_sort Wiedermann CJ
title Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding
title_short Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding
title_full Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding
title_fullStr Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding
title_full_unstemmed Ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor VII in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding
title_sort ineffective off-label use of recombinant activated factor vii in a case of bone-marrow transplantation-related gastrointestinal bleeding
publisher BMC
series Thrombosis Journal
issn 1477-9560
publishDate 2006-01-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>For patients with a normal coagulation system, who experience serious bleeding, sound evidence for recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) as an effective haemostatic agent is only scarcely available so far from controlled clinical trials. In systematic reviews on the clinical use of rFVIIa, treatment failures were only rarely reported.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>We present a 45-year old, Caucasian male with persistent intestinal bleeding due to enterocolitis associated with cytomegalovirus infection and acute graft-versus-host-disease. He had received allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation from an unrelated HLA-identical donor because of chronic myelogenous leukaemia diagnosed two years earlier. Bleeding started at day 18 after transplantation with bloody diarrhea, which was treated with multiple transfusions of fresh frozen plasma, platelet, and red blood cell concentrates, and continued relentlessly, despite all efforts, including continued transfusions, high-dose prednisolone, broad antibiotic and antiviral coverage, and tranexamic acid. Recombinant FVIIa was started at boluses of 90–120 μg/kg every 4–8 hours. Despite more than 10 doses, recurrent severe bleeding progressed to refractory shock, multiorgan failure and death.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Little can be concluded from single case reports of clinical improvement, because publication bias in favour of positive effects is likely. Our case suggests that rFVIIa is not a panacea, in particular for severe bleeding after bone-marrow transplantation. As long as rigorous, controlled studies or comprehensive registries are lacking, conventional interventions remain the standard of care in non-haemophilic patients with severe bleeding.</p>
url http://www.thrombosisjournal.com/content/4/1/1
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AT pechlanerc ineffectiveofflabeluseofrecombinantactivatedfactorviiinacaseofbonemarrowtransplantationrelatedgastrointestinalbleeding
AT ellerp ineffectiveofflabeluseofrecombinantactivatedfactorviiinacaseofbonemarrowtransplantationrelatedgastrointestinalbleeding
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