Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP) 

1. Definition

Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP) is the cell-free liquid portion of whole blood, separated and frozen within a defined time after collection to preserve labile coagulation factors (V & VIII).


2. Preparation & Processing

Source

  • Obtained from:
    • Whole blood donation, or
    • Plasmapheresis

Processing Steps

  1. Whole blood centrifuged plasma separated
  2. Plasma frozen rapidly:
    • Within 8 hours (US FDA)
    • Within 6 hours (many European standards)

Why rapid freezing?

  • Preserves labile clotting factors (V, VIII)
  • Prevents degradation of natural anticoagulants (Protein C, S)


3. Storage & Shelf Life

Parameter

Value

Storage temperature

≤ −18°C (often −30°C)

Shelf life (frozen)

1 year

After thawing (1–6°C)

24 hours(best use immediately)

Refreezing

Not allowed

Thawing occurs in a water bath at 30 °C to 37 °C over 20 to 30 minutes or in an FDA-cleared device in as little as 2 to 3 minutes. Once thawed, FFP should be administered immediately. Storage at 1 °C to 6 °C is required if not used right away.

⚠️ Once thawed use within 24 hours(Once thawed, clotting factor activity declines gradually, particularly factor V and factor VIII. Due to the short half-life of factor VII, which ranges from 2 to 6 hours,)


4. Composition

FFP contains ALL plasma proteins in physiological concentrations:

Coagulation Factors

  • Procoagulants: I (fibrinogen), II, V, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII
  • Natural anticoagulants:
    • Protein C
    • Protein S
    • Antithrombin III

Other Components

  • Albumin
  • Immunoglobulins
  • Complement proteins
  • Electrolytes


5. Volume & Dosing

Standard Volume

  • 200–250 mL per unit

Dose

Situation

Dose

General coagulopathy

10–15 mL/kg

Massive bleeding

15–20 mL/kg

TTP plasma exchange

40–60 mL/kg/day

📌 Rule of thumb:

  • 1 unit FFP clotting factor levels by ~2–3%
  • The administration of a single 250 mL unit is expected to increase the fibrinogen level by 5 to 10 mg/dL. 


6. ABO & Rh Compatibility

ABO

  • MUST be ABO compatible
  • Plasma compatibility is reverse of RBC

Recipient

Compatible FFP

Group O

O, A, B, AB

Group A

A, AB

Group B

B, AB

Group AB

AB only

➡️ Universal plasma donor = AB plasma

Rh

  • Rh matching NOT required (no RBCs)


7. Mechanism of Action

FFP:

  • Replenishes deficient clotting factors
  • Restores thrombin generation
  • Corrects prolonged PT / INR / aPTT
  • Provides antithrombin in DIC & massive transfusion


8. Indications 

A. Active Bleeding + Coagulopathy (MOST IMPORTANT)

FFP is indicated ONLY when there is bleeding or high bleeding risk

1. Massive Transfusion Protocol (MTP)

  • PRBC : FFP : Platelets = 1 : 1 : 1
  • Prevents dilutional coagulopathy

2. Trauma-induced coagulopathy

  • Early balanced transfusion improves survival


B. Elevated INR with Bleeding

Scenario

Recommendation

INR >1.5 with bleeding

 FFP

INR >2.0 before urgent procedure

 FFP

INR elevated without bleeding

 NO FFP

📌 Never give FFP just to “correct INR” without bleeding


C. Liver Disease

  • Active bleeding or prior to high-risk procedures
  • INR alone is NOT indication (rebalanced hemostasis concept)


D. Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)

  • Only if bleeding
  • Along with:
    • Treat cause
    • Platelets if <50,000
    • Cryoprecipitate if fibrinogen <100 mg/dL


E. Warfarin Reversal (when PCC unavailable)

Situation

Preferred

Life-threatening bleed

4-factor PCC + Vitamin K

PCC unavailable

FFP + Vitamin K

⚠️ FFP is slower, larger volume, less effective than PCC


F. Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP)

  • Therapeutic plasma exchange
  • FFP replaces ADAMTS13 enzyme

➡️ FFP is LIFE-SAVING in TTP


G. Congenital Factor Deficiency (Rare)

  • Factor V deficiency
  • Factor XI deficiency
  • When specific factor concentrate unavailable


9. Contraindications / NON-INDICATIONS 

DO NOT USE FFP FOR:

Condition

Reason

Volume expansion

Albumin/crystalloids better

Nutritional protein

Ineffective

Hypoalbuminemia

Albumin preferred

Isolated INR prolongation without bleeding

No benefit

Minor procedures

Unnecessary risk


10. Adverse Effects & Complications

A. Transfusion-Associated Circulatory Overload (TACO)

  • Large volume
  • Elderly, CHF, CKD

B. Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury (TRALI)

  • Most common with plasma
  • Anti-HLA / anti-neutrophil antibodies
  • Acute hypoxemia, non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema

C. Allergic Reactions

  • Urticaria anaphylaxis

D. Infectious Risks

  • HIV, HBV, HCV (very rare now)
  • Bacterial contamination (rare)

E. Citrate Toxicity

  • Hypocalcemia hypotension, arrhythmias
  • Common in massive transfusion


11. Monitoring After FFP

Clinical

  • Bleeding control
  • Hemodynamics
  • Respiratory status (TRALI/TACO)

Laboratory

  • PT / INR
  • aPTT
  • Fibrinogen
  • Ionized calcium (during massive transfusion)


12. FFP vs Other Plasma Products 

Product

Key Difference

FFP

Frozen within 6–8 h

FP24

Frozen within 24 h (slightly factor V/VIII)

Cryoprecipitate

Fibrinogen, VIII, XIII, vWF

PCC

Concentrated II, VII, IX, X

Albumin

Volume, oncotic pressure only