MASSIVE BLOOD TRANSFUSION
1. DEFINITION
Classical Definitions
Massive transfusion is defined as any of the following:
|
Definition |
Criteria |
|
Classic |
≥ 10 units PRBC in 24 hours |
|
Half-massive |
≥ 5 units PRBC in 4 hours |
|
Critical bleeding (preferred) |
≥ 3 units PRBC in 1 hour with ongoing bleeding |
|
Blood volume–based |
Replacement of one blood volume in 24 h or 50% blood volume in 3 h |
|
Pediatric |
≥ 40 mL/kg PRBC within 24 h |
👉 Modern guidelines prefer “critical bleeding requiring MTP” rather than waiting for 10 units.
2. INDICATIONS FOR ACTIVATING MTP
Trauma
- Penetrating trauma
- Blunt trauma with hypotension
- Pelvic fracture with shock
- FAST positive with hypotension
- Severe polytrauma
Non-trauma
- Massive GI bleed
- Post-partum hemorrhage
- Ruptured AAA
- Liver transplantation
- Cardiac surgery catastrophe
- Major vascular surgery
- ECMO bleeding
3. PREDICTION SCORES FOR MASSIVE TRANSFUSION
A. ABC Score (Assessment of Blood Consumption)
|
Parameter |
Score |
|
Penetrating mechanism |
1 |
|
SBP ≤ 90 mmHg |
1 |
|
HR ≥ 120/min |
1 |
|
FAST positive |
1 |
Score ≥ 2 → Activate MTP
B. Shock Index
- HR / SBP > 1
- Associated with high transfusion requirement
C. Laboratory Predictors
- INR > 1.5
- Platelets < 100,000
- Base deficit > 6
- Lactate > 4 mmol/L
4. GOALS OF MASSIVE TRANSFUSION
- Restore oxygen-carrying capacity
- Correct coagulopathy
- Prevent dilutional thrombocytopenia
- Maintain normothermia
- Prevent metabolic complications
- Achieve rapid surgical hemostasis
5. COMPONENT THERAPY IN MBT
CORE PRINCIPLE: Balanced Transfusion
Recommended Ratio (Damage Control Resuscitation)
|
Component |
Ratio |
|
PRBC : Plasma : Platelets |
1 : 1 : 1 |
|
Alternative acceptable |
2 : 1 : 1 |
📌 Based on PROPPR trial – improved hemostasis and early survival.
6. COMPONENT DETAILS
A. Packed Red Blood Cells (PRBC)
- Restores oxygen delivery
- Hb target:
- Trauma/active bleed: ≥ 7–9 g/dL
- TBI, ischemic heart disease: ≥ 9–10 g/dL
Issues
- No platelets or clotting factors
- Citrate load
- Potassium accumulation
- Storage lesion → ↓ 2,3-DPG
B. Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP)
|
Property |
Value |
|
Contains |
All clotting factors |
|
Dose |
15–20 mL/kg |
|
INR correction |
Best if INR > 1.5 |
Used early, not as rescue.
C. Platelets
|
Parameter |
Target |
|
Platelet count |
> 50,000/mm³ |
|
Neurotrauma |
> 100,000/mm³ |
- 1 adult apheresis platelet ≈ 6 pooled units
- Dilutional thrombocytopenia develops early
D. Cryoprecipitate
|
Component |
Content |
|
Fibrinogen |
Highest concentration |
|
Also contains |
Factor VIII, XIII, vWF |
Indication
- Fibrinogen < 150–200 mg/dL
Dose
- 10 units → raises fibrinogen ~50 mg/dL
👉 Early fibrinogen replacement is critical
7. FIBRINOGEN – THE FIRST FACTOR TO FALL
|
Stage |
Fibrinogen |
|
Early hemorrhage |
↓↓↓ |
|
Before INR prolongs |
Yes |
Replacement Options
- Cryoprecipitate
- Fibrinogen concentrate (where available)
8. ADJUNCTIVE THERAPIES
A. Tranexamic Acid (TXA)
CRASH-2 Trial
|
Parameter |
Recommendation |
|
Indication |
Suspected major hemorrhage |
|
Dose |
1 g IV over 10 min → 1 g over 8 h |
|
Time |
Within 3 hours ONLY |
|
After 3 h |
Harmful |
B. Calcium Replacement
Why hypocalcemia occurs
- Citrate in blood binds calcium
Effects
- ↓ Myocardial contractility
- Hypotension
- Coagulopathy
Targets
- Ionized Ca > 1.1 mmol/L
Treatment
- Calcium gluconate or calcium chloride
C. Warming
- Hypothermia worsens coagulopathy
- Use:
- Blood warmers
- Forced air warming
- Warm IV fluids
9. LETHAL TRIAD OF TRAUMA
|
Component |
Effect |
|
Hypothermia |
Platelet dysfunction |
|
Acidosis |
↓ Enzyme activity |
|
Coagulopathy |
Ongoing bleeding |
👉 Massive transfusion aims to break this triad
10. DILUTIONAL & CONSUMPTIVE COAGULOPATHY
Mechanisms
- Loss of clotting factors
- Dilution from crystalloids
- Platelet consumption
- Hyperfibrinolysis
11. TRANSFUSION-RELATED COMPLICATIONS IN MBT
A. Metabolic
|
Complication |
Cause |
|
Hypocalcemia |
Citrate |
|
Hyperkalemia |
Stored RBCs |
|
Metabolic alkalosis |
Citrate metabolism |
|
Hypomagnesemia |
Citrate |
B. Hematologic
|
Complication |
Explanation |
|
Dilutional thrombocytopenia |
Platelet loss |
|
DIC |
Ongoing shock |
|
Coagulopathy |
Factor depletion |
C. Pulmonary
|
Condition |
Mechanism |
|
TRALI |
Anti-HLA antibodies |
|
TACO |
Volume overload |
|
ARDS |
Inflammatory response |
D. Immunologic & Infectious
- Febrile reactions
- Hemolytic reactions
- Transfusion-transmitted infections (rare)
12. LABORATORY & VISCOELASTIC MONITORING
Standard Labs
- Hb
- Platelets
- INR/PT
- aPTT
- Fibrinogen
- ABG, lactate
- Ionized calcium
Viscoelastic Tests (Preferred)
|
Test |
Role |
|
TEG / ROTEM |
Goal-directed transfusion |
|
Advantages |
Rapid, functional clot assessment |
Guides
- Fibrinogen replacement
- Platelets
- Plasma
- Antifibrinolytics
13. DAMAGE CONTROL RESUSCITATION (DCR)
Core Principles
- Permissive hypotension (SBP 80–90)
❌ Contraindicated in TBI - Early MTP activation
- Minimal crystalloids
- Rapid hemorrhage control
- Early TXA
- Correction of hypothermia, acidosis
14. TERMINATION OF MTP
Criteria
- Surgical hemostasis achieved
- Hemodynamics stabilized
- Lactate improving
- Reduced transfusion need
- Labs normalized
15. SPECIAL POPULATIONS
A. Traumatic Brain Injury
- Avoid hypotension
- Platelets > 100,000
- Higher Hb targets
B. Obstetric Hemorrhage
- Early fibrinogen replacement
- TXA early
- Uterine source control
C. Liver Disease
- Baseline coagulopathy
- Viscoelastic testing preferred
17. KEY EXAM PEARLS (VERY HIGH-YIELD)
- Fibrinogen is first factor to fall
- 1:1:1 transfusion improves early hemostasis
- TXA only within 3 hours
- Hypocalcemia is common and lethal
- Avoid crystalloids
- Use TEG/ROTEM if available
- Stop MTP as soon as bleeding controlled

