CLIPII – Cryopreserved vs Liquid-Stored Platelets

Cryopreserved vs Liquid-Stored Platelets for the Treatment of Surgical Bleeding: The CLIP-II Randomized Noninferiority Clinical Trial

Reade. JAMA, 2025. doi: 10.1001/jama.2025.23355

Clinical Question

  • In adult cardiac surgery patients at high risk of bleeding, is the transfusion of cryopreserved platelets, compared with conventional liquid-stored platelets, non-inferior in reducing postoperative bleeding within the first 24 hours after ICU admission?

Background

  • Platelet transfusion is a key component of managing major bleeding, with early transfusion recommended to reduce mortality
    • Conventional liquid-stored platelets are stored at 22°C, with a short shelf-life (5–7 days), leading to limited availability and periodic shortages
    • Cryopreserved platelets use dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and are stored at -80°C, then resuspended in plasma prior to transfusion, extending the shelf life to up to 2 years
    • If cryopreserved platelets are safe and efficacious, this could reduce wastage and improve of platelet availability in settings where access in currently limited currently including regional, remote and military centres
  • Existing Evidence
    • Safety studies and pilot trials (Khuri 1999; Slichter 2018; McGuinness 2021) have demonstrated no increase in adverse events with cryopreserved platelets
    • Comparative and observational data (Bohonek 2019) suggest similar survival and transfusion requirements compared with liquid-stored platelets
    • The CLIP-I randomized controlled pilot study (Reade et al 2019) identified chest drain blood loss within the first 24 hours as an appropriate endpoint for assessing non-inferiority

Design

  • Multicentre randomised, double blinded, parallel group, non-inferiority Phase III trial
    • Trial protocol and investigator brochure approved by the Austin Health and Australian Red Cross Lifeblood Human Research Committees
    • Written consent obtained at least 1 day prior to planned surgery
    • Trial protocol and statistical analysis plan published prior to interim analysis (50% recruitment)
  • Randomised
    • 1:1 randomisation prior to surgery using computer-generated permuted blocks of size of 2 or 4, with allocation concealment
    • Only patients who received platelet transfusions (clinical indication) included in study analysis
    • Stratified by trial site
  • Double Blinded
    • Two unblinded nurses at each hospital (not involved in care) conducted routine pretransfusion safety checks
    • Study platelets issued from blood bank with opaque cover
    • Participants, treating clinicians and outcome assessors all remained blinding to group allocation throughout the trial
  • Statistical Analysis
    • Prespecified non-inferiority margin of 20%, chosen to approximate the mean volume of a unit of red blood cells (258 mL)
    • Transfusion of 202 patients would have 80% power to detect above non-inferiority limit at a one sided p-value of 0.025
      • Based on local pilot data
    • Primary outcome log-transformed and results presented as geometric means
    • Fine and Grey competing risk model (accounting for competing risk of death) used to assess time to event outcomes

Setting

  • 11 Australian Hospitals
  • 25th August 2021 – 16th April 2024

Population

  • Inclusion:
    • Adults ≥18 years
    • Undergoing cardiac surgery
    • High risk of requiring platelet transfusion (ACSePT score ≥1 [equates to a 30% probability of needing platelets]) or clinician judgement
  • Exclusion:
    • Prior enrolment in bleeding medication trials
    • History of Deep Vein Thrombosis or Pulmonary Embolism
    • Known coagulopathy or current-anticoagulant related bleeding disorder
    • Females aged 18–55 years who were RhD-negative or RhD-unknown
  • Participant numbers
    • 879 screened –> 388 randomised
      • 196 to cryopreserved and 192 to liquid stored
    • 202 received study platelets and were analysed
      • Cryopreserved platelets: 104
      • Liquid-stored platelets: 98
  • Baseline Characteristics similar between groups (Cryopreserved vs Liquid-Stored)
    • Demographics
      • Age: 65.5 vs 63.2
      • Female Sex: 22.1% vs 26.5%
      • BMI: 28.5 vs 27.4
      • EuroScore II risk score: 3.5 vs 3.4
    • Nature of Surgery
      • Elective: 70.2% vs 69.4%
      • Deep Hypothermic Arrest: 16.3% vs 17.3%
      • Minimally invasive operation: 1% vs 4.1%
      • Total Cardiopulmonary Bypass Time (mins): 195 vs 180
    • Lab Test Results
      • Creatinine Clearance >85mL/min: 38.5% vs 41.8%
      • Preop Hb <100g/dL: 11.5% vs 12.2%
      • Preop Platelets <100 x 103/μL: 1% vs 2%
      • Preop aPTT >40s: 7.9% vs 12.6%
      • Preop fibrinogen <200mg/dL: 0% vs 1.1%
      • Preop INR >1.5: 3% vs 2.1%
    • Pre-operative Treatments
      • Tranexamic Acid 24h prior to surgery: 7.7% vs 7.1%
      • Anticoagulant within 7 days: 59.6% vs 59.2%
      • Aspirin within 7 days: 32.7% vs 36.7%
      • Prophylactic enoxaparin within 7 days: 16.3% vs 27.6%
      • Prophylactic heparin within 7 days: 16.3% vs 10.2%

Intervention

  • Cryopreserved platelets
    • Thawed cryopreserved group O apheresis platelets
    • Reconstituted in ABO group matched plasma
    • Median of 2 units received
    • 25% received open label liquid platelets prior to 3rd study unit being complete
    • 16% received open label liquid platelets after to 3rd study unit being complete

Control

  • Liquid Platelets
    • In a mixture of plasma and platelet additive solution
    • Either derived from whole blood or donated by apheresis with ABO group matching according to hospital practice
    • Median of 1 unit received
    • 3.1% received open label liquid platelets prior to 3rd study unit being complete
    • 9% received open label liquid platelets after to 3rd study unit being complete

Management common to both groups

  • Study platelet transfusion at clinician discretion as part of standard perioperative bleeding management
  • Open-label liquid-stored platelets permitted after 3 study units if required
  • First study platelet administered either intraoperatively or within first 24 hours following ICU Admission –  subsequent units could be administered at any time up until ICU discharge
  • Time between ordering and receipt of products did not differ between groups
    • ~85% received first platelets in OR

Outcome

  • Primary outcome: Post Surgical Chest Drain Bleeding in first 24 hours
    • Cryopreserved: Geometric mean 605mls (95% CI 532 – 688)
    • Liquid stored: Geometric mean 535mls (95% CI 480 – 596)
      • Ratio of geometric means: 1.13 [95% CI, 0.96 – 1.34]; P= .07
      • Non-inferiority was not established, as the upper confidence limit exceeded the pre-specified 20% margin
      • Remained non-inferior on adjustment (site and EUROSCORE II)
      • All subgroups consistent (platelet compatibility, surgery complexity, aspirin use and location of first transfusion)
  • Selected Secondary and Tertiary outcomes:
    • No significant difference:
      • Adverse events (low incidence in both groups)
      • Thrombotic complications
      • 24-hour haemoglobin concentration nadir
      • Inotrope and vasopressor requirements
      • Time to recommence aspirin and heparin (numerically shorter in liquid stored group)
      • Renal replacement therapy
      • Survival
    • Significantly greater in cryopreserved Platelet group
      • Chest Drain Volume at ICU admission
      • Total Postoperative Blood loss
        • Ratio of geometric means 1.31 (95% CI 1.07 – 1.60)
      • BARC-4 composite bleeding outcome
        • 31.7 vs 12.3%
      • Red blood cell transfusions, fresh frozen plasma and cryoprecipitate transfusions
      • Time to chest drain removal
      • Time to extubation
      • ICU and Hospital length of stay
    • Significantly less in Cryopreserved Platelet Group
      • Platelet count at 24 hours lower in cryopreserved group (103 vs 140)

Authors’ Conclusions

  • Cryopreserved platelets could not be shown to be non-inferior to liquid stored platelets for post operative bleeding within 24 hours of cardiac surgery

Strengths

  • Multicentre, multidisciplinary collaboration involving cardiac surgeons, anaesthetists, intensivists and haematologists
  • An important question given the supply constraints in some settings
  • Double blinded with robust measures to maintain blinding
  • Randomised with allocation concealment
  • Pragmatic approach
    • Clinicians titrated platelet transfusion, reflective of real world practice, rather than protocol based
  • Objective Primary Outcome
    • Chest drain output reliably measured in post cardiac surgery patients
  • Prespecified and appropriate Statistical Analysis Plan
    • Non-inferiority margin defined prior and clinically relevant; based around mean volume of red blood cell transfusion unit
    • Per Protocol Sensitivity Analysis completed whereby those that received open label platelets before 3 study units were excluded – primary outcome consistent with main results
  • Minimal Missing Data
    • Only one patient had missing data, limiting risk of attrition bias
  • Baseline Demographics well balanced
    • Inclusive of 30% non elective surgery, 65% complex surgery, 60% abnormal renal function

Weaknesses

  • Dose Exposure
    • Maximum of 3 study platelets limits assessment of dose response and safety at higher exposures
  • Open-Label platelet use higher in cryopreserved group
    • Higher proportion of patients in cryopreserved group received open label platelets prior to administration 3 study platelets, possible confounding treatment effects
    • Is this due to not being as effective or is it due to potential unblinding – DMSO has a distinctive smell
  • Potential Inequivalence of “units”
    • Cryopreserved and liquid stored platelets differ substantially in phenotype and post transfusion recovery, raising possibility that unit for unit comparison is not equivocal
  • Timing of subsequent study platelets variable and unclear, may not have preceded measurement of primary outcome
  • Limited to Cardiac Surgery
    • Patient’s restricted to those undergoing high risk cardiac surgery, limiting translation to trauma, gastrointestinal bleeding and obstetric haemorrhage.
  • Limited to Australian Sites
    • Limiting translation across sites internationally, particularly given potential difference in clinician directed transfusion practices

The Bottom Line

  • The CLIP-II Trial demonstrated that cryopreserved platelets were not non-inferior to liquid stored platelets for control of bleeding in cardiac surgery patients. Cryopreserved platelets were associated with greater total blood loss, higher transfusion requirements, and longer ICU stays
  • In centres where liquid stored platelets are readily available, these should continue to be used for first line therapy for cardiac surgical bleeding
  • Cryopreserved platelets may still have utility in settings where platelet availability is limited, however this should be further evaluated

External Links

Metadata

Summary author: Samuel Finlayson
Summary date: 18th December 2025
Peer-review editor: George Walker

Picture by: AhmadArdity/Pixabay

 

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