Intraoperative Autologous Blood Donation Leads to Fewer Transfusions in Cardiac Surgery
Background
Blood conservation with antifibrinolytics, topical hemostatics, and strict transfusion triggers are becoming commonplace in cardiac surgery. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of a blood conservation protocol centering on standardized IAD use in cardiac surgery.
Methods
We reviewed patient charts who underwent cardiac surgery at our hospital over an 8 year period to analyze transfusion tendencies before and after a new blood conservaton policy was implemented. Propensity score matching was employed to account for population differences in preoperative and perioperative covariates.
Results
1002 patients were studied over an 8-year period (January 2009-December 2017). 352 patients prior to the new blood conservation policy (Group 1) were compared to 650 patients following the change (Group 2). Fewer Group 2 patients required blood transfusions during their hospital stay (78% vs 61%, p < 0.001), were transfused fewer units (2.8 vs 1.81 units, p < 0.001), and experienced a shorter length of stay (8.02 vs 7.28 days, p = 0.012). Propensity score matched cohorts revealed reductions in any complication (29.5% vs 18.8%, p = 0.007), fewer post-operative transfusions (70.1% vs 50.9%, p < 0.0001), and a lower transfusion volume (1.82 vs 1.21 units, p = 0.0015) associated with IAD without any associated change in mortality.
Conclusions
IAD use is associated with reduced transfusions in cardiac surgery, and may be considered a complementary aspect of blood conservation. Our experience suggests it may be applied with few limitations. A causal relationship between IAD and outcomes should be established with prospective studies.