Transfusion medicine reviews
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Review Meta Analysis
Prophylactic Use of Tranexamic Acid for Postpartum Bleeding Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials.
Despite multimodal approaches to treatment, postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is a life-threatening condition whose incidence continues to rise. In developing areas, such as sub-Saharan Africa, PPH is the leading cause of maternal mortality. Tranexamic acid (TXA) is a possible prophylactic treatment for the prevention of PPH. ⋯ There appeared to be no increased risk of venous thromboembolism and no difference in length of hospital stay associated with TXA use. Although prophylactic TXA administration may be associated with improved peripartum bleeding, existing evidence is insufficient for any definitive recommendations secondary to the poor to moderate quality of the literature. A large well-designed, methodologically sound, randomized controlled trial is needed to better delineate the true effect size and address potential safety concerns.
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Review Meta Analysis
Blood Warming and Hemolysis: A Systematic Review With Meta-Analysis.
The use of fluid warmers during blood transfusion is recommended to avoid inducing hypothermia and its harmful effects. Fluid warmers offered by manufacturers can reach temperatures of 43°C. However, the recommendations of national regulatory organizations do not clearly indicate the maximum heating temperature in relation to the risk of hemolysis. ⋯ Moreover, the duration between sampling and hemolysis assay was a source of heterogeneity among studies, as were the initial free hemoglobin levels in the various experiments. In general, the increase generated by each of these factors other than temperature appears to have been limited except for blood age, which is an important parameter of hemolysis, the length of exposure to heat, and, in some studies, the type of infusion pump used. Regarding the meta-analysis, at temperatures at or less than 43°C and even up to 45-46°C, it appears that blood heating is safe and causes hemolysis only in clinically negligible proportions.
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Review Meta Analysis
The impact of perioperative iron on the use of red blood cell transfusions in gastrointestinal surgery: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Perioperative anemia is common, yet detrimental, in surgical patients. However, red blood cell transfusions (RBCTs) used to treat anemia are associated with significant postoperative risks and worse oncologic outcomes. Perioperative iron has been suggested to mitigate perioperative anemia. ⋯ Meta-analysis revealed a trend toward fewer patients requiring RBCT with iron supplementation (risk ratio, 0.66 [0.42, 1.02]), but no benefit on the number of RBCT per patient (weighted mean difference, -0.91 [-1.61, -0.18]). Although preliminary evidence suggests that it may be a promising strategy, there is insufficient evidence to support the routine use of perioperative iron to decrease the need for RBCT in colorectal cancer surgery. Well-designed RCTs focusing on the need for RBCT and including long-term outcomes are warranted.
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Review Meta Analysis
The effects of lysine analogs during pelvic surgery: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Pelvic vasculature is complex and inconsistent while pelvic bones impede access to pelvic organs. These anatomical characteristics render pelvic surgery inherently difficult, and some of these procedures are frequently associated with blood loss that necessitates blood transfusion. The aim of this study was to review the literature on the use of lysine analogs to prevent bleeding and blood transfusion during pelvic surgery. ⋯ Although there does not appear to be a large increase in the risk of thromboembolic and nonthrombotic adverse events, more data are required to definitively assess these outcomes. Based on this review, lysine analogs during pelvic surgery seem to reduce bleeding and blood transfusion requirements. Although there does not seem to be a significant risk of adverse effects, larger studies would help clarify risks, if any, associated with lysine analog use.
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Previous meta-analyses of the randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the association of perioperative allogeneic blood transfusion (ABT) with postoperative bacterial infection included studies transfusing either autologous or white blood cell (WBC)-reduced allogeneic red blood cells (RBCs) or whole blood to the control arm, and they were unable to investigate the type of RBC product administered as an explanation for the disagreements among the studies. The availability of additional RCTs has permitted investigation of this hypothesis in a meta-analysis restricted to RCTs transfusing WBC-reduced allogeneic RBCs or whole blood to the control arm. In this analysis, across 5 RCTs comparing recipients of non-WBC-reduced versus WBC-reduced allogeneic RBCs, there was no difference (P > .25) in the risk of postoperative infection between recipients of buffy-coat-reduced versus WBC-reduced allogeneic RBCs filtered before storage (summary odds ratio [OR] = 1.19; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.87-1.63). ⋯ Moreover, across 3 RCTs that enrolled patients undergoing open-heart surgery, there was an increased (P < .05) risk of postoperative infection in recipients of buffy-coat-reduced (compared with WBC-reduced) allogeneic RBCs (summary OR = 1.39; 95% CI, 1.08-1.80), but the findings of 5 RCTs that enrolled patients having abdominal surgery could not be combined because of extreme variation in the results of the studies. RCTs conducted in the setting of open-heart surgery or transfusing non-buffy-coat-reduced RBCs or whole blood to the treatment arm had administered various RBC products to the control arm, however, and thus the medical heterogeneity of the studies precludes any conclusion about an immunomodulatory (TRIM) effect of ABT mediated by non-buffy-coat-reduced RBC products. To determine whether such a deleterious immunomodulatory effect of ABT exists, additional RCTs transfusing non-buffy-coat-reduced RBCs to the treatment arm should be conducted.