Remark
1) Why was this study conducted? |
This article aims to describe the experience earned in the use of REBOA in non-compressible torso hemorrhage patients by Trauma and Emergency Surgery Group (CTE) of Cali, Colom bia. |
2) What were the most relevant results of the study? |
We propose two new deployment algorithms for hemodynamically unstable non- compressible torso hemorrhage patients: one for blunt and another for penetrating trauma. REBOA must be used in the right way, by the right surgeon with the right training and to the right patient. |
3) What do these results contribute? |
Our results show that REBOA can be used as a new component in the damage control resuscitation of the severely injured trauma patient. |
Introduction
Noncompressible torso hemorrhage is one of the leading causes of preventable death worldwide 1. An efficient and appropriate evaluation of the trauma patient with ongoing hemorrhage is essential to avoid developing the lethal diamond (hypothermia, coagulopathy, hypocalcemia, and acidosis) 2,3. The initial management strategies include permissive hypotension, hemostatic resuscitation, and damage control surgery 4. However, recent advances in technology have opened the doors to a wide variety of endovascular techniques that achieve these goals with minimal morbidity and limited access 5-7. An example of such advances has been the introduction of the Resuscitative Endovascular Balloon Occlusion of the Aorta (REBOA), which has received significant interest among trauma surgeons worldwide due to its potential and versatility in areas such as trauma, gynecology & obstetrics and gastroenterology 8. This article aims to describe the experience earned in the use of REBOA in Noncompressible torso hemorrhage patients.
This article is a consensus that synthesizes the experience earned during the past 30 years in trauma critical care management of the severely injured patient from the Trauma and Emergency Surgery Group (CTE) of Cali, Colombia, which is made up of experts from the University Hospital Fundación Valle del Lili, the University Hospital del Valle "Evaristo García" the Universidad del Valle and Universidad Icesi, the Asociación Colombiana de Cirugia, the Pan-American Trauma Society and the collaboration of national and international specialists of the United States of America, Europe, and Latin America.
Materials and Methods
A prospective, observational, single-center study was performed of all patients (age >14 years old) who underwent an endovascular aortic occlusion from January 2015 to December 2019 at our Level I University-affiliated Trauma Center in Cali, Colombia: Fundación Valle del Lili (FVL).
Patient demographics, clinical course, procedural conditions, and clinical outcomes data were collected and recorded from our FVL-REBOA Registry. The study was approved by our institutional ethics and review board committee. In practice, when a REBOA was placed, the trauma surgeon would immediately inform the research assistant, who would access all clinical records and extract patient data in real-time. The decision to place a REBOA resided on the treating trauma surgeon, and the most common indication was sustained hypotension (systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg) that did not respond to initial resuscitation.
Arterial access was established via the common femoral artery by surgical cutdown or percutaneously by ultrasound guidance. A 7, 11, or 14 Fr introducer sheath was inserted (according to availability). A REBOA catheter was placed in Zone 1 (extends from the origin of the left subclavian artery to the celiac trunk). Balloon inflation was ideally kept less than 30 minutes and reposition to Zone 3 (extends from lowest renal artery to the aortic bifurcation) according to the patient's needs. Partial REBOA was also used according to the patient's response and ultimate control of surgical bleeding. We developed an institutional algorithm to standardize the decision making on behalf of the treating trauma surgeon. The algorithm is instituted on arrival to the emergency room, where Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) principles are followed, and an early arterial vascular access is obtained. The institutional massive transfusion protocol is activated, and an Extended Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma (E-FAST) is done. The ultimate decision of transferring the patient to the operating room in cases of ongoing surgical bleeding and non-responders to initial aggressive damage control resuscitation should be undertaken simultaneously with the placement of a REBOA. All the REBOA's were placed by one of three Senior Attending Trauma Surgeon's that had been previously trained and certified in the technique. A rotating Trauma Fellow always assisted them. The continuous variables were described by median and interquartile range, the categorical variables by relative and absolute frequency. Statistical analyses were carried out in R-Language 3.5.6.
Results
A total of 56 patients underwent REBOA placement. Forty-eight (85%) were male with a median age of 33 (IQR: 23-45) years. Thirty-seven (66%) suffered penetrating trauma, and of these, 30 (81.8%) were from gunshot wounds, and 7 (18.1%) were from stab wounds. Nineteen (33.9%) suffered blunt trauma. All patients were hemodynamically unstable upon arrival to the emergency room median systolic blood pressure = 69 (IQR: 58-88) mm Hg; median Heart Rate= 110 (IQR: 96-127) bpm., and ten (17.8%) had cardiac arrest before or on arrival to the emergency room. The median Injury Severity Score was 25 (IQR: 25-37), median abdominal Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS) was 5 (IQR: 4-5), median chest AIS was 5 (IQR: 3-5), and median pelvic/extremity AIS was 3 (IQR: 3-3). Thoracic vascular injuries were presented in 19 (38%) patients (5 with subclavian artery injury, 4 with internal mammary artery injury, 4 with subclavian vein injury, among others), 11 (22%) had abdominal or pelvic vascular injuries (3 with common/external/internal iliac artery injuries, 3 with iliac vein injury, among others). Severe liver trauma [American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) Grade IV-V] was reported in 9 (18%), and 6 (12%) had severe lung injury (AAST Grade IV-V) (Table 1).
Variable | REBOA (n= 56) |
---|---|
Age, median (IQR) | 33 (23-45) |
Male sex, n (%) | 48 (85) |
Penetrating mechanism, n (%) | 37 (66) |
Gunshot wound, n (%) | 30 (81.08) |
Stab wound, n (%) | 7 (18.92) |
Blunt mechanism, n (%) | 19 (33.9) |
Injury Severity Score, median (IQR) | 25 (25-37) |
Chest AIS, median (IQR) | 5 (3-5) |
Abdominal AIS, median (IQR) | 5 (4-5) |
Pelvic/extremity AIS, median (IQR) | 3 (3-3) |
Vital Signs | |
Systolic Blood Pressure, mm HG, mean (SD) | 69 (29.1) |
Heart rate, bpm, median (IQR) | 110 (96-127) |
Glasgow Coma Score, median (IQR) | 14 (10-15) |
Cardiac arrest, n (%) | 10 (17.8) |
Resuscitation Requirements | |
Units of Packed-Red Blood Cells, 6 h, median (IQR) | 6 (4-9) |
Units of Fresh Frozen Plasma, 6 h, median (IQR) | 4 (3-6) |
Platelets, 6 h, median (IQR) | 6 (0-6) |
Cryoprecipitate, 6 h, median (IQR) | 7 (0-10) |
Units of Packed-Red Blood Cells, 24 h, median (IQR) | 7 (5-12) |
Units of Fresh Frozen Plasma, 24 h, median (IQR) | 7 (4-11) |
Platelets, 24 h, median (IQR) | 6 (0-12) |
Cryoprecipitate, 24 h, median (IQR) | 10 (4-16) |
Crystalloids, 24 h, mean (SD)* | 4,905 (2,752) |
AIS: Abbreviated Injury Score, IQR: Interquartile Range, SD: Standard Deviation.
Ninety-four percent (47 patients) of all REBOA's were placed in the operating room, common femoral artery access was established via surgical cutdown in 46 (82.1%) cases, and 10 (17.8%) were done by ultrasound guidance. Our first REBOA's commonly required the placement of 11 to 14 Fr sheaths [36 (64.2%) patients]. External anatomical landmarks were used to guide its positioning in 55 (98%) cases; one required C-arm fluoroscopy and none were placed by ultrasound guidance. Median systolic blood pressure pre-aortic occlusion was 50 (IQR: 40-65) mm Hg and the median systolic blood pressure post-aortic occlusion was 110 (IQR: 89-123) mm Hg. The median time between the start of the procedure and successful aortic occlusion was 5 (IQR: 5-10) min. REBOA was deployed in Zone 1 exclusively in 24 (42.8%) cases and was repositioned to Zone 3 in 26 (48.2%). Overall, the median time of occlusion was 41 (IQR: 24-60) minutes, and those who had exclusive Zone 1 occlusion was 25 (IQR: 19-43) minutes. The only complications related to REBOA placement were those related to vascular access (1 pseudoaneurysm, 2 thromboses, 4 femoral artery dissection, and 1 local infection), and associated adverse systemic events consisted of 2 cases of gastrointestinal bleeding, 2 of bowel ischemia, and 7 of renal failure (Table 2).
Variable | REBOA (n=56) |
---|---|
Arterial access | |
Surgical cutdown, n (%) | 46 (82.1) |
Ultrasound-guided percutaneous, n (%) | 10 (17.8) |
Location | |
Emergency department, n (%) | 2 (4) |
Operating room, n (%) | 53 (94) |
Angiography suite, n (%) | 1 (2) |
Pre-Aortic Occlusion | |
systolic blood pressure, mm Hg, median (IQR) | 50 (40-65) |
Post-Aortic Occlusion | |
systolic blood pressure, mm Hg, median (IQR) | 110 (89-123) |
Positioning zone | |
Zone 1, n (%) | 24 (42.8) |
Zone 3, n (%) | 6 (10.7) |
Zone 1 + Zone 3, n (%) | 26 (46.2) |
Duration of Aortic Occlusion | |
Total occlusion, min, median (IQR) | 41 (24-60) |
Zone 1, min, median (IQR) | 25 (19-43) |
Zone 3, min, median (IQR) | 16 (10-36) |
Type of Balloon Catheter | |
CodaTM, n (%) | 34 (60.7) |
Prytime emergency room-REBOATM, n (%) | 17 (30.3) |
Rescue balloonTM, n (%) | 3 (5.3) |
Jotec balloonTM, n (%) | 2 (3.5) |
Aortic Occlusion Positioning Technique | |
C-arm fluoroscopy, n (%) | 1 (2) |
Anatomical Landmarks, n (%) | 55 (98) |
Ultrasound | 0 |
AO: Aortic Occlusion, IQR: Interquartile Range, REBOA: Resuscitative Endovascular Balloon of the Aorta.
In conjunction with the use of REBOA, 10 (17.8%) patients underwent angioembolization, 40 (72%) laparotomy, 19 (34%) sternotomy, and 3 (6%) thoracotomy. Thoracic damage control surgery was implemented in 15 (26.7%) patients, abdominal damage control surgery in 33 (58.9%) and 5 (8.9%) required both. All patients underwent blood product transfusion within the first 6 hours upon admission median packed red blood cells 6 (IQR: 4-9) units; median fresh frozen plasma 4 (IQR: 3-6) units; median platelets 6 [(IQR: 0-6) units]. A total of 13 (26%) patients required massive transfusion protocol activation at a 1:1:1 ratio (Table 1). The median intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay was 7 (IQR: 3-19) days, median hospital length of stay was 11 (IQR: 4-25) days, and the median mechanical ventilation time was 4 (IQR: 2-7) days. The overall in-hospital mortality was 28.5% 16.
Surgical Rescue of a Hemodynamically Unstable Noncompressible torso hemorrhage Patient using REBOA
We have devised new algorithms that address in 5 easy to understand steps on how to manage a hemodynamically unstable patient suffering from Noncompressible torso hemorrhage from both blunt (Figure 1) and penetrating trauma (Figure 2):
Blunt Trauma
STEP 1: Attention should be directed towards identifying all immediate life-threatening injuries following the ABC mnemonic of ATLS chest/pelvic x-ray and E-FAST.. All life-threatening injuries confirmed by initial imaging should be addressed immediately before to continuing to the next step (for example chest tube, pelvic binder/sheet placement).
STEP 2: Both a common femoral vein and artery lines should be obtained for intravenous access and blood pressure monitoring. An aggressive damage control resuscitation is initiated via the activation of the institution's massive transfusion protocol.
STEP 3: If the patient is a transient responder, then a whole-body computed tomography is recommended to further delineate the extent of the injuries. If the patient is a non-transient responder, then he or she should undergo REBOA Zone 1 placement either in the emergency room or the operating room.
STEP 4: Both the transient responder that required whole-body computed tomography with positive surgical findings and the non-transient responder that required REBOA Zone 1 placement, should be transferred immediately to the operating room, angio, and/or hybrid room for definitive or damage control surgical management.
STEP 5: All transient responders without surgical injuries on whole-body computed tomography and those that required operating room, angio, and/or hybrid room for definitive or damage control surgical management should be transferred to the ICU for completion of their damage control resuscitation. Those that required damage control surgery should return to the operating room within 24-72 hours for definitive care.
Penetrating Trauma
STEP 1: Attention should be directed towards identifying all immediate life-threatening injuries following the ABC mnemonic of ATLS (chest x-ray and FAST). All life-threatening injuries confirmed by initial imaging should be addressed immediately before the next step (for example chest tube placement).
STEP 2: Both a common femoral vein and artery lines are placed for intravenous access and blood pressure monitoring. An aggressive damage control resuscitation is initiated via the activation of the institution's massive transfusion protocol.
STEP 3: If the patient is a transient responder, then a selective computed tomography (CT) is recommended to further delineate the extent of the injuries. If the patient is a non-transient responder, they should undergo REBOA Zone 1 placement either in the emergency room or the operating room.
STEP 4: Both the transient responder that required selective CT with positive surgical findings and the non-transient responder that required REBOA Zone 1 placement, should be transferred immediately to the operating room, angio and/or hybrid room for definitive or damage control surgical management.
STEP 5: All transient responders without surgical injuries on selective CT and those that required operating room, angio, and/or hybrid room for definitive or damage control surgical management should be transferred to the ICU for completion of their damage control resuscitation . Those that required damage control surgery should return to the operating room within 24-72 hours for definitive care.
Discussion
REBOA is an important resuscitative tool that ultimately prevents hemodynamic collapse while at the same time maintains coronary and cerebral perfusion in hemodynamically unstable trauma patients, and due to its less invasive nature, it has become an alternative to resuscitative thoracotomy 9-16. Hörer et al. proposed the concept of Endovascular Resuscitation and Trauma Management, a vision that integrates a multidisciplinary patient-centered approach that achieves prompt and effective hemorrhage control with significantly less surgical insult 6,17. We implemented our institutional use of REBOA in 2014 and became pioneers in Latin America on its use, developing new indications to the traditional uses described by U.S.A. and European counterparts 18-20. This is partly due to the increased rate of penetrating trauma (68%) that plagues our Colombian society, which is far higher than that of similar published series of 7 to 15% worldwide 21,22. Also, our patients commonly arrive in severe hemorrhagic shock with a high associated Injury Severity Score (>25) which has made us push the envelope on its use and venture into applying it even in cases of penetrating thoracic trauma with excellent results 8. In addition, we have created a novel two-team approach to caring for the critically ill trauma patient which allows one team to perform surgical exposures and definitive hemorrhage control, while the other team simultaneously manages the resuscitation including all aspects of REBOA. All REBOA catheters were placed by the attending trauma surgeon and the arterial access was obtained via a cutdown technique utilizing anatomical landmarks in most cases. Another striking difference is that most of our REBOA's are placed in the operating room (94%) and not in the emergency room, which is the norm worldwide 23,24. All of our REBOA's are inflated initially in Zone 1 of the aorta and subsequently lowered to Zone 3 when indicated. Our initial experience began with the use of large introducer sheaths (11- 14 Fr) (36 patients) which caused, as to be expected, multiple site-related complications (8 patients) requiring open surgical repair 25. But with the introduction of the newly designed 7 Fr catheters, these vascular access complications have resolved. Their use is our recommendation at any center that is contemplating the adoption of this technology 24,26,27.
Noncompressible torso hemorrhage patients require immediate control of ongoing surgical hemorrhage and with this goal in mind we have developed at our institution two separate management algorithms: one for blunt and another for penetrating trauma. These algorithms should be carried out by two different teams that work simultaneously. One performs the actual surgical procedure required to achieve Noncompressible torso hemorrhage control, and the other places and inflates the REBOA. As a result, the placement of a REBOA does not entail any surgical delay in obtaining definitive control of the primary source of hemorrhage and does not oppose the concept of damage control surgery. To the contrary, we believe that REBOA is a new and vital pillar of Damage Control Resuscitation. These algorithms are centered according to the following conceptual axis (Figure 3):
Instead of the traditional "ABCDE" mnemonic advocated by ATLS we should follow Hörer's modification "AABCDE" where the second "A" represents early common femoral artery access via placement of a vascular sheath 6,28.
REBOA placement requires a well-trained surgeon 8.
REBOA is a dynamic tool that demands exclusive attention on behalf of the surgeon for its ongoing management. The different techniques of its use (complete versus partial) and sequential deployment from Zone 1 to Zone 3 should be directed by the treating surgeon with the aim of achieving hemorrhage control while at the same time decreasing the possibility of collateral damage 29,30.
REBOA is an essential pillar of damage control resuscitation in the hemodynamically unstable Noncompressible torso hemorrhage trauma patient. REBOA should be placed when the patient is hemodynamically unstable (systolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg) and not when the patient develops cardiac arrest which was until recently the classic indication for a resuscitative left thoracotomy 31,32.
REBOA has the potential to evolve into the newest member of the diverse trauma team involved in the care of the severely injured. As all new technologies, its effectiveness is limited by its human counterpart. As the trauma surgeon improves in its use and placement, it is only then that the REBOA can establish a strong foothold in the management of these patients.
Conclusion
Our results show that REBOA can be used as a new pillar in the damage control resuscitation of the severely injured trauma patient and to this end we propose two new deployment algorithms for hemodynamically unstable Noncompressible torso hemorrhage patients: one for blunt and another for penetrating trauma. We acknowledge that REBOA has its limitations which include a steep learning curve, its inherent cost and availability. Although, to reach the best outcomes with this new technology, it must be used in the right way, by the right surgeon with the right training and to the right patient.