[HTML][HTML] Perioperative trajectory of haemoglobin, predictors of blood transfusion and tailoring targets for patient blood management interventions: A single-centre …

M Ștefan, AR Lupu, Ș Andrei, L Văleanu… - Romanian Journal of …, 2022 - sciendo.com
M Ștefan, AR Lupu, Ș Andrei, L Văleanu, O Știru, C Robu, T Bute, B Moroșanu…
Romanian Journal of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, 2022sciendo.com
Background: Anaemia and blood transfusion are two independent contributing factors to
perioperative morbidity in cardiac surgery. While preoperative treatment of anaemia has
been shown to improve outcomes, in real life, logistical difficulties remain substantial, even
in high-income countries. The adequate trigger for transfusion in this population remains
controversial, and there is a wide variability in transfusion rates among centres. Objectives:
To assess the impact of preoperative anaemia on perioperative transfusion in elective …
Background
Anaemia and blood transfusion are two independent contributing factors to perioperative morbidity in cardiac surgery. While preoperative treatment of anaemia has been shown to improve outcomes, in real life, logistical difficulties remain substantial, even in high-income countries. The adequate trigger for transfusion in this population remains controversial, and there is a wide variability in transfusion rates among centres.
Objectives
To assess the impact of preoperative anaemia on perioperative transfusion in elective cardiac surgery, to describe the perioperative trajectory of haemoglobin (Hb), to stratify outcomes based on preoperative presence of anaemia and to identify predictors of perioperative blood transfusion.
Materials and Methods
We included a retrospective cohort of consecutive patients who underwent cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass in a tertiary centre of cardiovascular surgery. Recorded outcomes included hospital and intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay (LOS), surgical re-exploration due to bleeding, packed red blood cell (PRBC) transfusion pre-, intra-and postoperatively. Other record perioperative variables were preoperative chronic kidney disease, duration of surgery, use of rotation thromboelastometry (ROTEM) and cell saver, and fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and platelet (PLT) transfusion. Hb values were recorded at four distinct time points: Hb1–at hospital admission, Hb2–last Hb recorded preoperatively, Hb3–first Hb recorded postoperatively and Hb4–at hospital discharge. We compared the outcomes between anaemic and non-anaemic patients. Transfusion was decided by the attending physician on a case-by-case basis.
Results
Of the 856 patients operated during the selected period, 716 underwent non-emergent surgery and 710 were included in the analysis. Also, 40.5%(n= 288) of patients were anaemic preoperatively (Hb< 13 g/dl); 369 patients (52%) were transfused PRBCs, with differences found between anaemic and non-anaemic patients regarding the percentage of transfused patients perioperatively (71.5% vs 38.6%, p< 0.001) and in the total median number of units transfused (2 [IQR 0–2] vs 0 [IQR 0–1], p< 0.001). We built a multivariate model, and logistic regression analysis showed that preoperative Hb< 13 g/dl (odds ratio [OR] 3.462 [95% CI 1.766–6.787]), female sex (OR 3.224 [95% CI 1.648–6.306]), age (1.024 per year [95% CI 1.0008–1.049]), hospital LOS (OR 1.093 per day of hospitalisation [95% CI 1.037–1.151]) and FFP transfusion (OR 5.110 [95% CI 1.997–13.071]) are associated with PRBC transfusion.
Conclusions
Untreated preoperative anaemia leads to more transfusion in elective cardiac surgery patients, both as a ratio of transfused patients and as the number of units of PRBCs per patient, and this is associated with an increased use in FFP.
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