Blood drug could many save lives in combat, trauma

LONDON, (Reuters) – A cheap generic drug used to stem  bleeding from heavy menstrual periods could save the lives of  tens of thousands of accident victims each year and help reduce  the number of deaths in combat, scientists said yesterday.

In a systematic review of studies on the effectiveness of  tranexamic acid, or TXA, British researchers found that it  reduces the risk of death in injured patients with severe  bleeding by about 10 percent compared to giving no treatment.

This would equate to saving more than 70,000 lives a year if  the blood clotting drug was used worldwide, they said in their  study published in The Cochrane Library journal.
More than 90 percent of trauma deaths occur in low-income  and middle-income countries, where access to medicines is often  restricted by poorer infrastructure and fewer resources.

“TXA reduces the risk of a patient bleeding to death  following an injury and appears to have few side effects,” lead  researcher Ian Roberts, of the London School of Hygiene and  Tropical Medicine, said in a statement. “It could save lives in  both civilian and military settings.”

The findings were based on one large trial involving 20,211  patients and one small trial involving 240 patients.

Injuries are a major cause of death across the world. Every  year, more than a million people die from road injuries, making  traffic accidents the ninth leading cause of death worldwide