Patient Blood Management in Orthopedic Surgical Patients in Turkey
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Arthropathy
- Sponsor
- Prof. Serdar Gunaydin
- Enrollment
- 369
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- red cell transfusion
- Last Updated
- 4 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Transfusion practice for surgical patients has changed from replacing surgically lost blood with allogeneic blood transfusions to implementing strategies that reduce transfusion requirements. Patient Blood Management (PBM), which is "the timely application of evidence-based medical and surgical concepts designed to maintain haemoglobin concentration, optimize hemostasis and minimize blood loss in an effort to improve patient outcome. There is mounting evidence that multimodal patient blood management (PBM) programmes can be effective at improving postoperative outcomes and reducing perioperative blood transfusions and costs The Turkish Society of Anaesthesiologists PBM Task Force has been working on this subject and studied transfusion practice throughout all through the peri-operative periods. Unfortunately we documented a high transfusion rate in major surgical patients in Turkey. One of the surgeries, that has high transfusion rate, was orthopaedic surgery. According to our recent data we planned to implement PBM in major orthopaedic surgical patients and evaluate the effects PBM in transfusion rate and patient outcomes. While some elements of PBM have a strong evidence base in hip or knee replacement, such as the use of tranexamic acid (TXA) the evidence for preoperative anaemia optimisation with iron is less robust. Implementing PBM all through the operative period gains more importance.
Detailed Description
Active PBM Implementation: Patients undergoing hip or knee arthroplasty will be treated as follows: PBM will be performed as shown in the graph below "PBM Implementation Group". Active PBM group will be treated for preoperative anemia at least 3 weeks prior to the surgical intervention as per the "Anemia Algorithm" below Other pillars of PBM will be also performed to the treatment group as per the visual graph below. The parameters included in the PBM pillars will be recorded including preoperative anemia parameters. Postoperative variables and parameters related to complications will be recorded. For the control group (Non-PBM group), the data of the patients, will be prospectively included. The 1:1 ratio of the control and active groups will be done.
Investigators
Prof. Serdar Gunaydin
Prof. Dr
ERAS Turkey Association
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •In order to be eligible to participate in this trial, an individual must meet all of the following criteria:
- •Signed patient informed consent
- •Male or female patient at least 18 years old
- •Patients scheduled for an elective major orthopaedic surgery (hip arthroplasty, knee arthroplasty, primary and revision operations)
- •Patients with confirmed iron deficiency anemia (IDA), defined as Hb 100-130 g/L, and serum ferritin \< 100 ng/ml or TSAT \< 20%.
- •Patients with iron deficiency anemia will be taken into surgery at least 3 weeks after the treatment.
Exclusion Criteria
- •Patients that undergo emergency surgical procedure and trauma cases are excluded from the study.
- •Patients with non-iron deficiency anaemia (thalassemia, sickle cell anaemia and etc.)
- •Patients with renal anaemia (Hb \< 130 g/L and CCL \< 50 mL/min, irrespective of iron parameters) or any diagnosis that require EPO will be excluded
- •Patients with known anaphylactic/hypersensitivity reactions to parenteral iron products.
- •Patients with iron overload or disturbances in utilization of iron (e.g. haemochromatosis, hemosiderosis)
- •Patients with ≥3 times increase in aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase as per reference range.
- •Patients with excessive blood loss requiring massive transfusion (≥ 10 more red blood cell units)
- •Patients with known myelodysplastic syndromes.
- •Patients with chronic kidney disease with an estimated GFR \< 30 ml/min or with end-stage renal disease requiring scheduled dialysis.
- •Patients with known urinary tract infections with urea-splitting bacteria
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
red cell transfusion
Time Frame: 3 days
change in red blood cell transfusion rate
Secondary Outcomes
- cost(3 days)