A Simple Guideline Reduces the Need for Red Blood Cell Transfusions in Swiss Hospitals: A Prospective, Multicentre, Before-and-After Study in Elective Hip and Knee Replacement.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_594F74C1C08A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
A Simple Guideline Reduces the Need for Red Blood Cell Transfusions in Swiss Hospitals: A Prospective, Multicentre, Before-and-After Study in Elective Hip and Knee Replacement.
Journal
Transfusion Medicine and Hemotherapy
Author(s)
Fontana S., de la Cuadra C., Müller U., Schmid P., Perler M., Luginbühl M., Taleghani B.M.
ISSN
1660-3796 (Print)
ISSN-L
1660-3796
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2014
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
41
Number
3
Pages
182-188
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Optimising the use of blood has become a core task of transfusion medicine. Because no general guidelines are available in Switzerland, we analysed the effects of the introduction of a guideline on red blood cell (RBC) transfusion for elective orthopaedic surgery.
METHODS: Prospective, multicentre, before-and-after study comparing the use of RBCs in adult elective hip or knee replacement before and after the implementation of a guideline in 10 Swiss hospitals, developed together with all participants.
RESULTS: We included 2,134 patients, 1,238 in 7 months before, 896 in 6 months after intervention. 57 (34 or 2.7% before, 23 or 2.6% after) were lost before follow-up visit. The mean number of transfused RBC units decreased from 0.5 to 0.4 per patient (0.1, 95% CI 0.08-0.2; p = 0.014), the proportion of transfused patients from 20.9% to 16.9% (4%, 95% C.I. 0.7-7.4%; p = 0.02), and the pre-transfusion haemoglobin from 82.6 to 78.2 g/l (4.4 g/l, 95% C. I. 2.15-6.62 g/l, p < 0.001). We did not observe any statistically significant changes in in-hospital mortality (0.4% vs. 0%) and morbidity (4.1% vs. 4.0%), median hospital length of stay (9 vs. 9 days), follow-up mortality (0.4% vs. 0.2%) and follow-up morbidity (6.9% vs. 6.0%).
CONCLUSIONS: The introduction of a simple transfusion guideline reduces and standardises the use of RBCs by decreasing the haemoglobin transfusion trigger, without negative effects on the patient outcome. Local support, training, and monitoring of the effects are requirements for programmes optimising the use of blood.
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
09/11/2014 18:20
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:12
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