Archive for Tuesday, August 5, 2008

PolyHeme study shows synthetic blood product no better than real blood

August 5, 2008

Advertisement

Kansas University Hospital and KU Medical Center report that the national clinical trial for the blood substitute PolyHeme failed to show significant benefit to patients.

The study enrolled patients who were at risk of dying from severe trauma and blood loss. It was conducted at 32 Level I trauma centers in 19 states, including at KU. Ambulances in Wyandotte, Douglas and Leavenworth counties carried PolyHeme to treat patients who qualified between December 2005 and August 2006.

“The professionalism of the emergency providers from these counties in training and using PolyHeme was exceptional. We were all joined by the desire to find a better way to treat people at the earliest moments of serious trauma,” said Dr. Michael Moncure, principal investigator, in a news release.

There were 714 patients treated in the study and two of them were at KU. Thirteen percent of those who received PolyHeme died compared with the 10 percent who received the standard care of saline solution.

“The need to find better ways of treating patients continues,” Moncure said.