We evaluated in a double-blind randomized study the effect of epoetin beta (recombinant human erythropoietin) therapy on oxygen status in patients undergoing cardiac surgery who were contraindicated for autologous blood donation. All 76 patients enrolled in this study were randomized to the two treatment groups (5 x 500 U epoetin beta or placebo/kg body weight intravenously over a 14-day period before surgery) and received 300 mg Fe2+ per day orally before surgery. Before and after surgery the lactate level and the following parameters according to the oxygen status algorithm by Siggaard-Andersen were evaluated: arterial oxygen tension (PaO2), effective hemoglobin concentration (ceHb), arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2), oxygen half saturation tension (p50), red cell 2.3 diphosphoglycerate (2.3 DPG), arterial total oxygen concentration (ctO2), concentration of extractable oxygen (cx), and oxygen compensation factor (Qx). Therapy with epoetin beta led to increases in ceHb, PaO2, ctO2, and cx and to a decrease in Qx before surgery (p < 0.05 for PaO2, p < 0.0001 for the other parameters vs placebo). The cx in patients who received epoetin beta rose by approximately 20%, thus indicating a considerable improvement in O2 delivery. In patients receiving placebo the hemoximetric parameters remained outside the normal limits at all times after surgery, but in the epoetin beta group PaO2, ctO2, cx, and Qx returned almost to their baseline values by the second or fifth postoperative day, even though the frequency of transfusions was significantly higher in the placebo group. Whereas p50 and 2.3 DPG fell in the placebo group after surgery, these two parameters were significantly higher in the epoetin beta group and led to a further increase in cx (from 24% to 38%) versus the placebo group as a result of the right shift in the hemoglobin O2-binding curve. The postoperative incidence and severity of lactic acidosis were higher in the placebo group. Preoperative epoetin beta therapy is a safe way of providing increased extractable O2 (by 24% to 38%) and decreasing the risk of lactic acidosis after surgery. This therapy has a more favorable effect on the O2 binding curve than the transfusion of erythrocyte concentrate and enhances the effect of epoetin beta therapy on the postoperative oxygen status.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0022-2143(97)90166-9 | DOI Listing |
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