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Meta Analysis
Lumbar neuraxial procedures in thrombocytopenic patients across populations: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Melissa E Bauer, Roulhac D Toledano, Timothy Houle, Yaakov Beilin, Mark MacEachern, Madeline McCabe, Dana Rector, Jason P Cooper, Terry Gernsheimer, Ruth Landau, and Lisa Leffert.
- Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan Medical School, 1500 E Medical Center Dr, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA. Electronic address: mbalun@med.umich.edu.
- J Clin Anesth. 2020 May 1; 61: 109666.
IntroductionThere is currently no consensus regarding the minimum threshold platelet count to ensure safe neuraxial procedures. Numerous reports describe the safe performance of lumbar punctures in severely thrombocytopenic patients but reports of neuraxial anesthetic procedures in thrombocytopenic patients are limited. To date, the focus on specific populations in contemporary reviews has failed to include any actual hematoma cases. This systematic review aggregates reported lumbar neuraxial procedures from diverse thrombocytopenic populations to best elucidate the risk of spinal epidural hematoma.MethodsMEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane, CINAHL databases were searched for articles about thrombocytopenic patients (<100,000 × 106/L) who received a lumbar neuraxial procedure (lumbar puncture; spinal, epidural, or combined spinal-epidural analgesia/anesthesia; epidural catheter removal), whether spinal epidural hematoma occurred.ResultsOf 4167 articles reviewed, 131 met inclusion criteria. 7476 lumbar neuraxial procedures were performed without and 33 procedures with spinal epidural hematoma. Within the platelet count ranges of 1-25,000 × 106/L, 26-50,000 × 106/L, 51-75,000 × 106/L, and 76-99,000 × 106/L there were 14, 6, 9, and 4 spinal epidural hematomas, respectively. An infection point and narrow confidence intervals were observed near 75,000 × 106/L or above, reflecting a low probability of spinal epidural hematoma in this sample. Of the 19 spinal epidural hematoma cases for which the onset of symptoms was reported, 18 (95%) were symptomatic within 48 h of the procedure.ConclusionsSpinal epidural hematoma in thrombocytopenic patients is rare. In this sample of patients, an inflection point and narrow confidence intervals are observed near a platelet count of 75,000 × 106/L or above, reflecting an estimated low spinal epidural hematoma event rate with more certainty given a larger sample size and inclusion of spinal epidural hematoma cases. Thrombocytopenic patients should be monitored, particularly in the first 48 h, and educated about symptoms concerning for spinal epidural hematoma.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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