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Effect of the administration route on the hemostatic efficacy of tranexamic acid in patients undergoing short-segment posterior lumbar interbody fusion: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Matthew J HatterZach PenningtonTimothy I HsuTara ShooshaniOlivia YaleOmead PooladzandiSean S SolomonBryce PictonMarlena RamanisNolan J BrownSohaib HashmiYu-Po LeeNitin BhatiaMartin H Pham
Published in: Journal of neurosurgery. Spine (2024)
The present meta-analysis suggested clinical equipoise between isolated sTXA, isolated tTXA, and combinatorial tTXA+sTXA formulations as hemostatic adjuvants/neoadjuvants in short-segment fusion including ≥ 1-level PLIF. Given the theoretically lower venous thromboembolism risk associated with tTXA, additional investigations using large cohorts comparing these two formulations within the posterior fusion population are merited. Although TXA has been shown to be effective, there are insufficient data to support topical or systemic administration as superior within the open PLIF population.
Keyphrases
  • venous thromboembolism
  • systematic review
  • patients undergoing
  • meta analyses
  • direct oral anticoagulants
  • electronic health record
  • machine learning
  • big data
  • deep learning
  • data analysis