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Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014
33

Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Jan 14, 2016

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Page 1: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Transfusion for Medical StudentsNov 2014

Page 2: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Requesting blood for transfusion

Page 3: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

• What is a group and screen test?The patient’s blood group is checked and an antibody

screen is performed on the patient’s plasma. The sample can be kept in the lab for up to 6 days and then a crossmatch can be subsequently requested

• What is a crossmatch test?The patient’s plasma is mixed with the donor’s red cells to

make sure there is compatibility. When ordering state amount, time required, urgent / routine (look at surgical blood order schedule for elective surgery)

Page 4: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Case 1: 27-year-old patient has a massive post-partum haemorrhage with severe hypotension

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0%1. Emergency Gp O RhD negative blood does not need to be crossmatched answer text...2. Fully crossmatched blood would take 45 mins to be made available3. If O RhD blood is given there is no need to take a crossmatch sample4. Group specific blood can be made available in 15-30 mins

Page 5: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

ASSESS URGENCYChoose the right products

COMMUNICATEAllocate a lead to liaise with lab &

porters

AVOID ERRORSCareful bedside labelling

XM, FBC, coag screen – swiftly to lab

REQUESTING BLOOD

Group O Important antibodies may cause reaction

Valuable resource

Extreme emergency only

Group specificABO & RhD compatible

Important antibodies may cause reaction

~15mins from sample arriving

CrossmatchedFully screened for antibodies

~45-60 mins from sample arriving

Safest product if time allows

Preempt need for FFP (30mins to thaw; 12-15mL/kg = 4 units for average adult)

Preempt need for platelets

Pre transfusion testing

On receipt of the pre-transfusion sample the following steps are undertaken:•Check the historical records•Group: Identify ABO and RhD group•Screen: Check plasma for antibodies•Crossmatch: Select component

The patient’s serum or plasma can be saved for up to 6 days in case later cross-match is required

Pre transfusion testing

On receipt of the pre-transfusion sample the following steps are undertaken:•Check the historical records•Group: Identify ABO and RhD group•Screen: Check plasma for antibodies•Crossmatch: Select component

The patient’s serum or plasma can be saved for up to 6 days in case later cross-match is required

Page 6: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Transfusion Management of Massive HaemorrhagePatient bleeding / collapses

Ongoing severe bleeding eg: 150 mls/min and Clinical shockAdminister Tranexamic Acid

(1g bolus followed by 1g infusion over 8 hours)

Patient bleeding / collapsesOngoing severe bleeding eg: 150 mls/min and Clinical shock

Administer Tranexamic Acid(1g bolus followed by 1g infusion over 8 hours)

Call for help‘Massive Haemorrhage, Location, Specialty’Alert emergency response team (including

blood transfusion laboratory, portering/ transport staff)

Consultant involvement essential

Call for help‘Massive Haemorrhage, Location, Specialty’Alert emergency response team (including

blood transfusion laboratory, portering/ transport staff)

Consultant involvement essential

Take bloods and send to lab:XM, FBC, PT, APTT, fibrinogen, U+E, Ca2+

NPT: ABG, TEG / ROTEM if availableand

Order Massive Haemorrhage Pack 1Red cells* 4 unitsFFP 4 units

Platelets 1 dose (ATD)(*Emergency O blood, group specific blood,

XM blood depending on availability)

Take bloods and send to lab:XM, FBC, PT, APTT, fibrinogen, U+E, Ca2+

NPT: ABG, TEG / ROTEM if availableand

Order Massive Haemorrhage Pack 1Red cells* 4 unitsFFP 4 units

Platelets 1 dose (ATD)(*Emergency O blood, group specific blood,

XM blood depending on availability)

ReassessSuspected continuing haemorrhage

requiring further transfusionTake bloods and send to lab:FBC, PT, APTT, fibrinogen, U+E, Ca2+

NPT: ABG, TEG / ROTEM if available

ReassessSuspected continuing haemorrhage

requiring further transfusionTake bloods and send to lab:FBC, PT, APTT, fibrinogen, U+E, Ca2+

NPT: ABG, TEG / ROTEM if available

Give MHP 2Give MHP 2

Insert local arrangements:Activation Tel Number(s)

•Emergency O red cells- location of supply:

* Time to receive at this clinical area:•Group specific red cells

• XM red cells

Insert local arrangements:Activation Tel Number(s)

•Emergency O red cells- location of supply:

* Time to receive at this clinical area:•Group specific red cells

• XM red cells

STOP THE BLEEDING

RESUSCITATEAirway

BreathingCirculation

Haemorrhage ControlDirect pressure / tourniquet if appropriateStabilise fracturesSurgical intervention – consider damage control surgeryInterventional radiologyEndoscopic techniques

Haemorrhage ControlDirect pressure / tourniquet if appropriateStabilise fracturesSurgical intervention – consider damage control surgeryInterventional radiologyEndoscopic techniques

Haemostatic Drugs

Vit K and Prothrombin complex concentrate for warfarinisedpatients andOther haemostatic agents: discuss with Consultant Haematologist

Haemostatic Drugs

Vit K and Prothrombin complex concentrate for warfarinisedpatients andOther haemostatic agents: discuss with Consultant Haematologist

Prevent HypothermiaUse fluid warming deviceUsed forced air warming blanket

Prevent HypothermiaUse fluid warming deviceUsed forced air warming blanket

Cell salvage if available and appropriateConsider ratios of other components: 1 unit of red cells = c.250 mlssalvaged blood

Cell salvage if available and appropriateConsider ratios of other components: 1 unit of red cells = c.250 mlssalvaged blood

Consider 10 mls Calcium chloride 10% over 10 minsConsider 10 mls Calcium chloride 10% over 10 mins

2 packs cryoprecipitate if fibrinogen < 1.5g/l or as guided by TEG / ROTEM

2 packs cryoprecipitate if fibrinogen < 1.5g/l or as guided by TEG / ROTEM

Aims for therapyAim for:Hb 8-10g/dlPlatelets >75 x 109/lPT ratio < 1.5APTT ratio <1.5Fibrinogen >1.5g/lCa2+ >1 mmol/lTemp > 36oCpH > 7.35 (on ABG) Monitor for hyperkalaemia

Aims for therapyAim for:Hb 8-10g/dlPlatelets >75 x 109/lPT ratio < 1.5APTT ratio <1.5Fibrinogen >1.5g/lCa2+ >1 mmol/lTemp > 36oCpH > 7.35 (on ABG) Monitor for hyperkalaemia

STAND DOWNInform lab

Return unused components

Complete documentationIncluding audit

proforma

Transfusion lab

Consultant Haematologist

Transfusion lab

Consultant Haematologist

Thromboprophylaxis should be considered when patient stable

Give MHP 1Give MHP 1

ABG – Arterial Blood Gas APTT – Activated partial thromboplastin time ATD- Adult Therapeutic DoseFFP- Fresh Frozen plasma MHP – Massive Haemorrhage Pack NPT – Near Patient TestingPT- Prothrombin Time TEG/ROTEM- Thromboelastography XM - Crossmatch

Order Massive Haemorrhage Pack 2Red cells 4 unitsFFP 4 units

Platelets 1 dose (ATD)and subsequently

request Cryoprecipitate 2 packsif fibrinogen <1.5g/l or according to TEG /

ROTEM

Order Massive Haemorrhage Pack 2Red cells 4 unitsFFP 4 units

Platelets 1 dose (ATD)and subsequently

request Cryoprecipitate 2 packsif fibrinogen <1.5g/l or according to TEG /

ROTEM

Once MHP 2 administered, repeat bloods:FBC, PT, APTT, fibrinogen, U+E,

NPT: ABG, TEG / ROTEM if availableTo inform further blood component

requesting

Once MHP 2 administered, repeat bloods:FBC, PT, APTT, fibrinogen, U+E,

NPT: ABG, TEG / ROTEM if availableTo inform further blood component

requesting

Activate Massive Haemorrhage Pathway

Continuous cardiac monitoringContinuous cardiac monitoring

v1 2011

Recognise blood loss

Resuscitate, call for help

Stop the bleeding – TXA, PCC

Team approach

Emergency runner

Communicate with lab early and clearly

Know where the Emergency O Neg is in your Trust

Massive haemorrhage packs 1 and 2

Monitor coag tests and move to goal directed therapy

Stand down

Page 7: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Case 2

67-year-old male, Mr Arvind Patel, (Group O) is admitted for elective hip replacement surgery. His Hb is 100 g/L. Because of excessive bleeding on the operating table the Consultant Anaesthetist asks for 2 units of blood. The theatre nurse collects 2 units of red cells labelled for Mr Suhail Patel and starts transfusion. Mr Suhail Patel is Group B.

Page 8: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

What are the potential clinical consequences for Mr Arvind Patel and how would they be managed?

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0% 1. There would be no problems as it is safe to give Group B blood to a Group O recipient so the transfusion could continue

2. The transfusion must be stopped immediately3. The partially transfused bag must be returned to the lab with

a blood sample from the patient 4. Oozing from venepuncture sites might be a sign of a

transfusion reaction

Page 9: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Blood Groups Blood Group Antibodies

A Anti-B

B Anti-A

AB None

O Anti-A Anti-B

RhD positive or RhD negative

A

OAB

B

Page 10: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

How could the error have been avoided?

0%

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0% 1. The theatre nurse collecting the blood should make a hand written note of the patient’s details so that she can identify the correct patient

2. The bag of blood should be checked against the patient’s notes3. The bag of blood should be checked against the patient’s wrist

band4. There is no need to do the bedside check when the patient is

anaesthetised

Page 11: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Could the transfusion have been avoided in the first place?

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0% 1. Yes because this type of surgery is suitable for cell salvage2. Yes because a Hb of 100g/L is a safe level for a 67 year old man3. No because the Hb alone is not the only trigger for transfusion4. Tranexamic acid would help to reduce blood loss in this situation

Page 12: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

BLOOD“1 unit RBC”

Usual time: 3hrs

4hr limit from removal from cold storage

to end of transfusion

Blood warmer for rapid transfusions

COMMON INDICATIONS

Acute blood lossOnly with significant blood volume loss

Consider cell salvage

Anaemia Hb < 70 g/LLikely requires transfusion

Consider correctible causes

Anaemia Hb 70 - 100 g/LConsider correctible causes

Transfuse if symptoms/needs eg IHD

Pre-operative assessmentCorrection of anaemia reduces need for

transfusion

MBOS (Maximum Blood Ordering Schedule)

Refer to Trust Blood Transfusion Policy

Refer to Trust Blood Transfusion Policy

Page 13: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Case 3: 17-year-old female with heavy periods presents with Hb of 50 g/L and MCV 55 fl.

Would you give a blood transfusion?

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0% 1. Yes, I would give a blood transfusion – that Hb level is very low2. No, I wouldn’t give a blood transfusion because she will respond to an alternative

therapy3. Oral iron will increase the Hb by 40g in 1 week

Page 14: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Case 4: A full blood count states the platelet count to be ‘6 x 109/L’ with an associated peripheral blood film comment of ‘platelet clumping seen’. A prophylactic

platelet transfusion (1ATD) is indicated as the platelet count is <10 x 109/L

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 15: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP) is the optimal treatment available to treat life-threatening

bleeding in patients on warfarin

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 16: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Red Cells Whole Blood Platelets (also apheresis)

Plasma Fresh Frozen Plasma Cryoprecipitate

Fractionation

Factor concentrates Eg FVI I I , FI X, PCC

I mmunoglobulin Albumin (Non UK Plasma)

Blood Components

Page 17: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

BLOOD COMPONENTS Fresh Frozen Plasma

“1 unit FFP”

Usual time: 30 mins/unitNeeds 30 mins to thaw in lab

Usual dose 12-15 mL/kg (4-6 units for average adult)

Main indications: coagulopathy with bleeding/surgery,

massive haemorrhage, TTP. Not warfarin reversal.

Cryoprecipitate“1 pool cryoprecipitate”

Usual time: 30 mins/bagNeeds 30 mins to thaw in lab

Adults: 1 pool = 5 donor units

Usual adult dose: 2 pools (10 donor units)

Main indication:

coagulopathy with fibrinogen < 1.5 g/L

Platelets“1 ATD platelets”

Usual time: 30 mins1hr limit

Usual dose: 1 adult treatment dose (ATD)

Shelf-life only 7 days from donation

Used as prophylaxis or treatment of bleeding / pre procedure in patients with

thrombocytopenia

Prothrombin Complex Concentrate (PCC)

Plasma-derivedVit K dependent factors: II VII IX X

For emergency reversal of life-threatening warfarin over-

anticoagulation(do not use FFP)

Issued by transfusion lab – supply in A&E

See trust policy

Prothrombin Complex Concentrate (PCC)

Plasma-derivedVit K dependent factors: II VII IX X

For emergency reversal of life-threatening warfarin over-

anticoagulation(do not use FFP)

Issued by transfusion lab – supply in A&E

See trust policy

PlateletsMassive haemorrhage

Keep platelet count above 75 x 109/l

Bone marrow failureplatelet count <10 × 109/l or <20 × 109/l if additional risk, e.g. sepsis

Prophylaxis for surgeryMinor procedures 50 x 109/l;More major surgery 80 x 109/l; CNS or eye surgery 100 x 109/l

Cardiopulmonary bypassPlatelets should be readily available use only if bleeding

Page 18: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

All patients with Hodgkin’s Disease should receive irradiated blood

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 19: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

All patients born after 1996 should have virally inactivated, non-UK sourced Plasma

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 20: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

All Stem Cell Transplant / Bone marrow transplant recipients require CMV negative blood

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 21: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Pregnant women have no special blood requirements, so there is no need to inform the transfusion laboratory of

their pregnancy or gestation on the request form

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 22: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS

CMV NEGATIVE

To keep at-risk patients CMV free(~50% of us are CMV negative)

Children < 1yr

Intrauterine transfusions

Congenital immunodeficiency

and unless known to be CMV IgG +ve:

Pregnant women having elective transfusion

IRRADIATEDTo prevent transfusion-associated

graft versus host disease (rare)in specific T-cell immunodeficiency

cases

Intrauterine transfusions

Congenital immunodeficiency

Hodgkin Lymphoma

Stem cell / marrow transplant patients

After purine analogue chemo

(eg: fludarabine)

Fairly specific indications… Paeds, Haem, Onc, O&G… …but “it is the responsibility of the prescribing doctor”

Fairly specific indications… Paeds, Haem, Onc, O&G… …but “it is the responsibility of the prescribing doctor”

Refer to Trust Blood Transfusion Policy

Refer to Trust Blood Transfusion Policy

Page 23: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

The risk of transmission of HIV with transfusion of red cells is 1 in 5 million donations in the UK

(0.2 per million donations)

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 24: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

A patient becomes acutely short of breath following a transfusion of FFP. Chest X-ray shows bilateral pulmonary

infiltrates and you give diuretics with some effect. The case should be reported as a clinical incident via the hospital reporting system, so it can be followed up appropriately

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 25: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

All donors are now screened for vCJD

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 26: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

A patient complains of feeling unwell during their transfusion. Their observation chart shows their

temperature, BP, pulse rate and respiratory rate to be stable. No specific action is required

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 27: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

A patient develops mild urticaria following a platelet transfusion. You should administer IV

chlorphenaramine (piriton) and IV hydrocortisone

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 28: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Anaphylaxis is most likely to happen in the first 15 minutes of transfusion

1 2

0%0%

1. True2. False

Page 29: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Serious Adverse Events from blood transfusion reported in UK 1996-2011

Serious Adverse Events from blood transfusion reported in UK 1996-2011

Risk of giving wrong blood is much greater than transfusion transmitted infection

Risk of giving wrong blood is much greater than transfusion transmitted infection

Page 30: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

TRANSFUSON REACTIONS

Suspectedsevere

reactionPyrexia, rigorsHypotension

Loin / back painIncreasing anxiety

Pain at the infusion siteRespiratory distress

Dark urineSevere tachycardia

Unexpected bleeding (DIC)

Mild reactionTemp rise < 1.5°C

UrticariaRash

Pruritis

STOP TRANSFUSION

Review obs

Paracetamol

Chlorpheniramine?

Restart cautiously

STOP TRANSFUSION

Right patient?

Right blood product?

Whole set to lab

New set with saline

Full bloods as policy

Checklist (see policy)

Incident formRefer to Trust

Blood Transfusion Policy

Refer to Trust Blood Transfusion

Policy

Trust Blood Transfusion Policy

OR

www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk

OR

Ask for help

Trust Blood Transfusion Policy

OR

www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk

OR

Ask for help

Page 31: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Yes

Severe / life-threatening•Call for urgent medical help•Initiate resuscitation- ABC•Discontinue transfusion and maintain venous access•Monitor the patient : TPR, BP, urinary output, oxygen sats

Anaphylaxis follow anaphylaxis pathwayIf bacterial contamination policy likely start antibiotic treatmentInform hospital transfusion departmentReturn unit and administration set to transfusionPerform appropriate investigations

Page 32: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Not Life threatening or Severe

Page 33: Transfusion for Medical Students Nov 2014. Requesting blood for transfusion.

Resources

Trust Guidelines and Policies

The Transfusion Handbookwww.transfusionguidelines.org.uk

Your Hospital Transfusion Team