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Perioperative Blood Conservation – An Overview Dr Prashant Shanker Agarwal Dr Ashok Jadon Deptt. Of Anaesthesiology
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Page 1: Blood Conservation

Perioperative Blood Conservation – An Overview

Dr Prashant Shanker Agarwal

Dr Ashok Jadon

Deptt. Of Anaesthesiology

Page 2: Blood Conservation

Do we feel that a transfusion is an organ transplant ?

Page 3: Blood Conservation

Session Objectives

• Provide an overview of blood conservation in perioperative patients

What is it?..Why is it important?..How is it accomplished?..

Page 4: Blood Conservation

SABM, 2007

What is Blood Conservation?• Blood Conservation: Society for

the Advancement of Blood Management (SABM)

‘team approach to surgical patient care that utilizes the latest drugs, technology and techniques to enhance a patients own blood supply and decrease blood loss …the aim is to reduce or avoid the need for transfusion’

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Why do we need blood…?

• For O2 transport…?

• O2 Content =

Hb*1.37*SaO2 + 0.0034*PaO2

• At Hb 4.7 g/dl O2 delivery reduces by 30% (Liberman JA. Anesthesiology 2000; 92.)

• Upto 40% permissible loss( approximately 2L in males) (Herbert PC. NEJM 1999; 340)

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ASA task force guidelines 1996

• Transfusion is rarely indicated when the hemoglobin level is above 10 g/dL

• Almost always indicated in patients when the hemoglobin level is below 6 g/dL;

• For hemoglobin level 6-10 g/dL – Ongoing indication of organ ischemia, – The rate and magnitude of any potential or actual

bleeding,– The patient’s intravascular volume status – Risk of complications due to inadequate oxygenation.

• Use Blood Components separately• Promote blood conservation

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O'Brien et al , 2007

Infectious and Non Infectious risks • 1 in 100 – minor allergic reactions

– rash etc

• 1 in 300 – febrile non-hemolytic reaction to RBC

• 1 in 700 – transfusion related circulatory overload

• 1 in 5,000 – Transfusion Related Acute Lung Injury (TRALI)

• 1 in 10,000 – Symptomatic bacterial sepsis from platelet transfusion

• 1 in 40,000 – death from bacterial sepsis - platelet transfusion

• 1 in 40,000 – ABO incompatible transfusion per RBC transfusion

• Coagulopathy

•1 in 40,000 – serious allergic reaction per unit of component, anaphylaxis

•1 in 82,000 – transmission of Hep B virus

•1 in 100,000 – bacterial sepsis per unit of RBC

•1 in 500,000 – death from bacterial sepsis per unit of RBC

•1 in 1,000,000 – WNV

•1 in 2,300,000 – Hep C transmission

•1 in 7,800,000 – HIV transmission

•Post Transfusion Purpura

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Intraoperative RBC Tx Increases Risk of Low

Output Failure

Surgenor, et al. Circulation 2006;114:43-48

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Is Blood Transfusion safe…when you can prevent it?

• Patient safety• Informed choice for patients

• Resource allocation• Infectious risks

• Non-infectious risks• Blood products are a scarce

resource• Blood is expensive!

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Blood Conservation – Why?• Conserve blood resources

– Regional blood centers find it increasingly difficult to collect sufficient blood to meet patient needs in many areas of the country.

– In the next 15-20 years the number of patients >65 y.o. will more than double but the number of blood donors will only marginally increase

– The number of units used nationwide is increasing 1% per year, but the people donating is decreasing 1% per year.

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Blood Component

Therapy

Page 13: Blood Conservation

Blood Conservation… Why perioperative patients?

• 50-70% of blood products used in hospitals are used in the perioperative setting (Hebert et al, 2004)

• Potential exists to modify some predictors of transfusion in elective surgical patients

- Pre-op Hb, Blood loss

• Wide variation in transfusion practice for procedures

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How important is pre-op Hemoglobin?

• A national (US) audit found that 35% of patients coming for arthroplasty have Hb <130g/L

• UK study found that 20% of all patients in 1 year were anemic males<130g/L, females <115g/L)

•GoodenoughGoodenough, , 20072007

•Karkouti et al 1999Karkouti et al 1999

•Saleh et al, 2007Saleh et al, 2007

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How Blood Conservation accomplished?

• Preoperative evaluation & Risk stratification

• Reduce need for blood transfusion

• Autologous Transfusion

Page 16: Blood Conservation

Pre-op evaluation

Pre-op Hb optimization: 4-6 week lead time for assessment, screening and

appropriate interventions:• Correction of nutritional anemia

iron therapy – dietary advice,supplements Vit B12, Folate

• Careful attention to patient medical history, pre op meds

ASA, Clopidrogel (Plavix), NSAIDs, herbal supplements

• Pre operative autologous donation• Erythropoietin therapy (Karkouti et al, 2005)

• ? Delay surgery

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METHOD TO REDUCE BLOOD USE IN SURGERY

• PREOPERATIVE * Surgery elective – Correct the Haemoglobin level. Stop drugs that interfere

haemostasis.• INTRAOPERATIVE

– Posture– Use of Vasoconstrictors– Use of tourniquets– Use of anti-fibrinolytic drugs eg tranexamic acid– Use of Aprotinine– Controlled hypotension, Regional anaesthesia

• POST OPERATIVELY– Blood can be salvaged from drains into collection

devices that permit reinfusion

Page 18: Blood Conservation

Meticulous Technique

• Careful, precise procedures, using natural tissue planes

• Planned vascular control• Use of clips, ligatures, and cautery

where appropriate• Newer techniques (harmonic scalpel,

LASER)• NB. MINIMIZE BLOOD LOSS

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Volume Expanders

• ACUTE VOLUME REPLACEMENT

• HYDROXYETHYL STARCH (HES)

• DEXRAN 70

• DEXTRAN40

• UREA-BRIDGED GELATIN (HAEMACCEL)

• Blood substitutes

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Blood Substitutes

• Hb sol. (human, bovine) – • Increases Hct• systemic & pulmonary HTN

• Perflurocarbon emulsions –• O2 solubility 20 times of plasma• Decreases Platelets & require high PaO2

• Focus is on the ability to carry oxygen, not on the other functions of blood

• Effective only for 12-24 hrs• Good for short term till blood is arranged

Page 21: Blood Conservation

Cell Salvage With Ultrafiltration

• ‘recycling’ of blood that would otherwise be discarded

• CV/ortho/trauma (Cochrane, 2006)

• Contraindicated in malignancy, contaminated wound

• RBC’s suspended in NS• May be acceptable to

JW patient

Cell Saver

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Cell Salvage

• The Hemobag® and its TS3 tubing set allows for Ultrafiltration both during the case and at the end for Whole Blood Autotransfusion.

• The end product is a hyperoncotic Autologous Whole Blood packed with viably functioning Platelets, Clotting Factors, Albumin, Plasma Proteins and RBC’s with no morbidity or side effects.

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Isovolemic Haemodilution

• 1 to 2 units of patient’s blood withdrawn at the beginning of a procedure

• Blood volume restored with crystalloid/colloid solution

• Patient bleeds “thin blood” during procedure

• Gets own blood back at the end

Page 24: Blood Conservation

Autologous Blood Transfusion

Collection and re-infusion (transfusion) of the patient’s own

Blood or Blood components.

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Why Autologous Blood Transfusion

• Fully compatible blood.• No risk of transfusion transmitted diseases

such as hepatitis, CMV and HIV infection.• Avoidance of allo-immunization.• Improved O2 perfusion by lowering blood

viscosity.• Acute Normovolemic Hemodilution provides

fresh whole blood .• Less dependant on the blood bank’s stock.

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A marked reduction in the hospital infection rates, antibiotic usage and length of hospital stay in patients who received autologous blood or no blood

Triulzi et al, Transfusion 1992;32:517-524; Forgie et al, 1998

Why Autologous Blood Transfusion

•Readily available in major haemorrhage•Avoidance of immuno-suppression

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Criteria

• Age: less than 65 year old• Hb: at least 11.0g/dl• Weight: at least 50kg• No h/o severe heart and lung disease,

abnormal bleeding tendency • No bacteraemia at time of donation• No h/o hepatitis B/C or HIV• Cancer not a contraindication

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Pre-surgical Autologous Blood Donation

• Best choice for patients with rare blood types or irregular antibodies.

• One unit per week & takes Fe/EPO.• Then donates 1 unit per week (usually no more

than 3 or 4 units)• Last donation must be at least 72 hrs before

operation.• Blood is stored and kept for patient for re-

infusion during/after operation.

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Labeling and Storage

• Carefully designed system.

– Special procedure code

– Autologous stamp.

– Detail of place and date of operation.

• Special and distinct label on blood pack.

• Autologous donor card with unit number on it.

• Stored in different site.

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Should Autologous Blood be “made homologous”?

The American Medical Association, AABB, NBS discourage the “crossover” of unused autologous units to the general blood supply.

• Liberal eligibility criteria. • Safety concerns.• Legal liability

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Role of Erythropoietin in Autologous Transfusion

• Allow more units to be collected.

• Need two to more weeks to work.

• Expensive.

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Points to consider

• Cost

• Surgeon and Anaesthetist enthusiasm

• Availability of allogeneic blood

• Which types of procedures: “ortho; intestinal; clean operations”

• Public awareness

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• Remember that transfusion of any Allogeneic blood or blood products is an “Organ Transplant", and not just another medication that is without side-effects. Treat everyone like a JW !

End of starting…..

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Transfusion Algorithm

• Avoid Transfusion : medical and surgical

• Alternatives

replacement fluids: crystalloids and non plasma colloids over plasma

pharmacologic agents to reduce bleeding

• Autologous donation• Minimize exposure to allogeneic

transfusion

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Thought for the day……“Blood transfusion is a lot like

marriage. It should not be entered into lightly, unadvisedly or wantonly, or more often than is absolutely necessary.”

Beal, RW, 1976Beal, RW, 1976

Beal RW, 1976Beal RW, 1976

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THANK YOUTHANK YOU

Page 37: Blood Conservation

Tranexamic Acid• Mechanism of Action:• Forms a reversible complex that displaces plasminogen from fibrin resulting

in inhibition of fibrinolysis; it also inhibits the proteolytic activity of plasmin

• Dose Children and Adults: I.V.: 10 mg/kg immediately before surgery, then 25 mg/kg/dose orally 3-4 times/day for 2-8 days

• Dosage modification required in patients with renal impairment; ophthalmic exam before and during therapy required if patient is treated beyond several days; caution in patients with cardiovascular, renal, or cerebrovascular disease; caution in patients with a history of thromboembolic disease (may increase risk of thrombosis); when used for subarachnoid hemorrhage, ischemic complications may occur

• Adverse Reactions:• >10%: Gastrointestinal: Nausea, diarrhea, vomiting • 1% to 10%: Cardiovascular: Hypotension, thrombosis • Ocular: Blurred vision • <1%: Unusual menstrual discomfort • Postmarketing and/or case reports: Deep venous thrombosis (DVT),

pulmonary embolus (PE), renal cortical necrosis, retinal artery obstruction, retinal vein obstruction, ureteral obstruction

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Summary• Controlled Hypotensive Anaesthesia

– current perspective

• Cell savaging procedures !!!!...???

• Use of Regional Anaesthesia & Tranexamic Acid

• Autologus Hemotransfusion– Normovolemic Hemodilution

• Increase oxygen delivery• Decreased DVT

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»Thank You