Summary
Recombinant human soluble thrombomodulin (rhTM) is a novel class of anticoagulants
for treating disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Although rhTM is widely
used in clinical settings throughout Japan, there is limited clinical evidence supporting
the use of rhTM in patients with sepsis-induced DIC. Furthermore, rhTM is not approved
for DIC treatment in other countries. This study aimed to clarify the survival benefits
of rhTM administration in critically ill patients. Data from 3,195 consecutive adult
patients who were admitted to 42 intensive care units for the treatment of severe
sepsis or septic shock between January 2011 and December 2013 were retrospectively
analysed, and 1,784 patients were diagnosed with DIC based on the scoring algorithm
from the Japanese Association for Acute Medicine DIC (n = 645, rhTM group; n = 1,139,
control group). Propensity score matching created 452 matched pairs, and logistic
regression analysis revealed a significant association between rhTM administration
and lower in-hospital all-cause mortality in the propensity score-matched groups (odds
ratio, 0.757; 95 % confidence interval, 0.574–0.999, p = 0.049). Inverse probability
of treatment weighted and quintile-stratified analyses also revealed significant associations
between rhTM administration and lower in-hospital all-cause mortality. Survival time
in the propensity score-matched rhTM group was significantly longer than that in the
propensity score-matched control group (hazard ratio, 0.781; 95 % confidence interval,
0.624–0.977, p = 0.03). Bleeding complications were not more frequent in the rhTM
groups. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that rhTM administration is associated
with reduced in-hospital all-cause mortality among patients with sepsis-induced DIC.
Keywords
Sepsis - disseminated intravascular coagulation - coagulation abnormality - mortality
- thrombomodulin