MedPath

An observational study of perioperative anaemia and transfusion in surgical patients at St George Hospital.

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
anaemia
iron deficiency
Blood - Anaemia
Metabolic and Endocrine - Other metabolic disorders
Registration Number
ACTRN12618001046291
Lead Sponsor
Department of Anaesthesia, St George Hospital
Brief Summary

Anemic patients are at increased risk of intraoperative and postoperative transfusion, infection and mortality. Anemia is common in surgical patients, previous studies report a prevalence of 30-40%. While patient blood management programs advisescreening for anemia, other perioperative initiatives advocate limiting preoperative laboratory testing. Therefore, a large number of surgical patients may not be screened, missingthe opportunity for further investigation and management.In our single-centerretrospective cohort study of all adult surgical patients over one year, we sought to estimate the proportion of anemia in patients without a preoperative blood test and their associated intraoperative and postoperative transfusion risk using multiple imputation to estimate missing hemoglobin values and inverse-probability-of-treatment-weighting to balance the study groups. Multiple imputation generated 39 datasets containing plausible hemoglobin values for patients missing a hemoglobin. Patients were classified as known-anemic, known-not-anemic, imputed-anemic and imputed-not-anemic if the hemoglobin was measured or imputed. We then compared red-cell transfusion yes/no by logistic regression, and number of red-cell units transfused by linear regression, pooling the results. Thirty-nine percent of 7879 patients were missing a hemoglobin, of whom 20-35% may be anemic. Only known-anemic patients had an increased intraoperative transfusion risk (odds ratio (OR) 3.13, 95% confidence interval (95%CI) 2.19 to 4.48). Both known-anemic and imputed-anemic patients had increased postoperative transfusion risk (OR 3.93 (95%CI 2.92 to 5.29), OR 2.99 (95%CI 1.61 to 5.56), respectively). Anemiamay be common in patients missing a haemoglobin, and may confer an increased risk of postoperative transfusion compared to known-anemic patients. Removing them from observation studies on anemia risks sample bias. Excluding patients from pre-operative testing may miss the opportunity to identify anemia and modify postoperative transfusionriskand other adverse health outcomes.Future research could use point-of-care tests to reducescreening costs, and further investigate adverse outcomesrisks in these missing patients.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
Completed
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
7879
Inclusion Criteria

All surgical procedures performed at St George Hospital during 2017 in patients 16 years or older.

Exclusion Criteria

All those undergoing a surgical procedure at St George Hospital under the age of 16 years.

Study & Design

Study Type
Observational
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Prevalence of anaemia (%) on patients hospital electronic blood test records[2 months prior to surgery up to the date of their surgery]
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath