Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study is critically to review the available evidence regarding the use, efficacy and safety of tranexamic acid in the management of hemorrhage during pregnancy and for prevention and treatment of postpartum hemorrhage.
Research design and methods: We performed a systematic search of electronic literature (PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus, Cochrane, DARE) to review all studies looking at the use of tranexamic acid during pregnancy and puerperium. We did a metanalysis on three randomized controlled trials that evaluated reduction in blood loss in women undergoing cesarean sections with the use of tranexamic acid.
Results: An electronic search yielded 34 articles, the studies dating from 1976 to 2010, five randomized controlled trials, seven observational studies, and twenty-two case reports. Meta-analysis showed that the estimate of the combined effect of tranexamic acid compared with placebo was a difference of 32.5 ml reduction in blood loss (95% CI −4.1 – 69.13; p = 0.08). Tranexamic acid was also used successfully to prevent and treat bleeding in observation studies and case reports. Pulmonary embolism was reported in two cases; however, the possible involvement of tranexamic acid in these thrombotic episodes could neither be confirmed nor excluded.
Conclusions: The clinical studies suggest that tranexamic acid reduces the amount of blood loss after delivery during cesarean sections and vaginal deliveries, and reduces the requirement for blood transfusion. Tranexamic acid seems to be safe and effective in the prevention and management of bleeding during pregnancy. Further investigation and larger clinical trials with better design and methodological quality are required to confirm these findings.
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Acknowledgements
The authors thank C Smith for the statistical analysis and the staff of the Royal Free library.