DIC for the Hospitalist: Sepsis, Trauma, and the Critical Balancing Act of Clotting and Bleeding
Manage episode 511228254 series 3692609
In this episode of Hospital Medicine Unplugged, we cut through DIC—systemic coagulation activation that causes microvascular thrombosis + consumptive bleeding—and show how to diagnose fast, treat the trigger, and tailor hemostatic support without fueling harm.
We open with the core phenotypes: SIC (sepsis) → early microthrombosis/organ dysfunction with modest bleeding; TIC (trauma) → early bleeding that later flips prothrombotic. Always anchor to context (sepsis, trauma, malignancy, obstetrics).
Recognition & labs you can’t skip:
• Think DIC with new bleeding, ischemia, or organ failure in a compatible illness.
• ISTH DIC score (platelets, PT, fibrinogen, D-dimer) for overt DIC; SIC criteria for earlier sepsis-phase disease.
• Typical pattern: thrombocytopenia, ↑PT/aPTT, low fibrinogen, ↑D-dimer—but phenotypes vary.
• Don’t miss mimics: TTP/HUS, HIT, severe liver disease, primary hyperfibrinolysis—because management diverges.
Treatment—fix the cause, then the clotting:
• Treat the trigger now: source control/antibiotics, hemorrhage control, cancer/APL therapy, obstetric management. This is the cornerstone.
• Supportive hemostasis (only if bleeding or high risk):
– Platelets: keep >50×10⁹/L if bleeding; 20–30×10⁹/L acceptable if not bleeding.
– FFP to target PT/aPTT <1.5× control.
– Fibrinogen: maintain >1.5 g/L (cryoprecipitate or FFP).
– Transfuse to clinical need, not to normalize every number.
• Anticoagulation (select cases):
– Predominantly thrombotic DIC, purpura fulminans, or proven VTE: consider heparin (e.g., UFH 300–500 U/h infusion) if no active bleeding/critical thrombocytopenia.
– Thromboprophylaxis (LMWH) for most hospitalized patients until bleeding ensues or platelets <30×10⁹/L.
• What not to expect: Antithrombin, recombinant thrombomodulin, activated protein C have no consistent mortality benefit in broad RCTs; bleeding risk is real. rTM may help selected SIC subgroups, but evidence remains emerging.
ICU moves & monitoring that matter:
• Reassess daily (or q24–48 h): platelets, PT/INR, fibrinogen, D-dimer, ISTH score trend. Rising scores → re-hunt the trigger and escalate support.
• Watch for both bleeding and new thrombosis; manage organ failure (vasopressors, ventilation, RRT).
• Use viscoelastic testing (where available) to guide targeted transfusion—not blanket product use.
Pitfalls you’ll avoid:
• Treating labs instead of the disease (over-transfusing the nonbleeder).
• Withholding prophylactic anticoagulation in a stable, thrombosis-dominant phenotype.
• Missing TTP/HIT—order ADAMTS13/PF4 when the story fits.
• Forgetting that COVID-19 coagulopathy is thrombotic-heavy (high D-dimer, often normal/↑fibrinogen) and only occasionally evolves to overt DIC.
We close with the system bundle: auto-trigger DIC/SIC scoring in sepsis/trauma, embed cause-first pathways (source control, hemostasis, oncology/OB), protocolized transfusion thresholds, VTE prophylaxis by platelet cutoffs, daily score-tracked rounds, and a hematology consult for thrombotic-dominant or refractory cases.
Treat the cause, individualize support, anticoagulate thoughtfully, and track the score—DIC management without the whiplash.
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