AI Article Synopsis

  • - Recent guidelines suggest that only one unit of red blood cells (RBC) should be transfused at a time, supporting the idea of single-unit transfusion rather than multiple units, although the evidence for this is limited.
  • - A comprehensive review found that out of 145 articles, only 14 provided clear recommendations on transfusion strategies, with most favoring single-unit transfusions, and another review showed a 10-41% decrease in RBC use after implementing single-unit policies.
  • - The conclusion emphasizes the need for more high-quality studies to better understand the benefits of single-unit transfusion strategies, address inconsistencies in existing research, and guide future transfusion practices.

Article Abstract

Background: Recent recommendations indicate that one red blood cell (RBC) unit should be transfused at a time, with reassessment after each transfusion, which may be extrapolated from literature supporting restrictive transfusion triggers rather than specific evidence. Therefore, two systematic reviews were performed to identify the following: 1) RBC transfusion guidelines and review articles to determine if single- or multiple-unit transfusion strategies are recommended and 2) studies comparing strategies for evidence of benefit.

Study Design And Methods: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science, National Guideline Clearinghouse, and Trip Database were searched (inception to June 2017). For the first review, the proportion of articles with single/multiple-unit recommendations was assessed and stratified by article type. For the second review, the primary outcome was RBC use. Secondary outcomes included proportion of transfusion episodes using a single-unit strategy, length of stay, and mortality.

Results: The first review identified 145 articles for analysis, with 51 transfusion guidelines. Only 14 guidelines (27%) made a recommendation, with most (93%) recommending single-unit transfusions. The second review identified seven cohort studies comparing preimplementation and postimplementation of a policy encouraging single-unit transfusion strategies. Meta-analysis could not be performed for outcomes given inconsistencies in reporting. RBC use decreased by approximately 10 to 41% across studies.

Conclusion: Transfusion guidelines lack recommendations to transfuse to a single-unit strategy. Mostly retrospective cohort studies (six of seven) are inconsistent in outcome reporting but suggest improved RBC use. Further high-quality studies could identify the benefits of a single-unit transfusion strategy, determine the applicability to different clinical settings, and inform future practice guidelines.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/trf.14952DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

transfusion strategies
12
transfusion guidelines
12
transfusion
10
systematic reviews
8
studies comparing
8
second review
8
single-unit strategy
8
review identified
8
cohort studies
8
single-unit transfusion
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!