| Literature DB >> 22051161 |
Maria Simou1, Nikolaos Thomakos, Flora Zagouri, Antonios Vlysmas, Nikolaos Akrivos, Dimitrios Zacharakis, Christos A Papadimitriou, Meletios-Athanassios Dimopoulos, Alexandros Rodolakis, Aris Antsaklis.
Abstract
This review attempts to outline the alternative measures and interventions used in bloodless surgery in the field of gynecologic oncology and demonstrate their effectiveness. Nowadays, as increasingly more patients are expressing their fears concerning the potential risks accompanying allogenic transfusion of blood products, putting the theory of bloodless surgery into practice seems to gaining greater acceptance. An increasing number of institutions appear to be successfully adopting approaches that minimize blood usage for all patients treated for gynecologic malignancies. Preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative measures are required, such as optimization of red blood cell mass, adequate preoperative plan and invasive hemostatic procedures, assisting anesthetic techniques, individualization of anemia tolerance, autologous blood donation, normovolemic hemodilution, intraoperative cell salvage and pharmacologic agents for controlling blood loss. An individualised management plan of experienced personnel adopting a multidisciplinary team approach should be available to establish non-blood management strategies, and not only on demand of the patient, in the field of gynecologic oncology with the use of drugs, devices and surgical-medical techniques.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22051161 PMCID: PMC3225312 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-9-142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Clinical studies evaluating blood conservation methods in major pelvic surgery and gynecologic cancer patients
| Study author/year | Number of patients | operation/pathology | Methods of blood conservation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mays 1976[ | 51 | Gyn surgery/obstet. | Iron-dextran |
| Bonakdar 1982[ | 164 | Major gyn surgery/obstet. | No transfusion |
| Powell 1983[ | 26 | Radical hysterectomy &pelvic lymphadenectomy | Nitroglycerine hypotensive anesthesia |
| Takemura 1989[ | 3 | Stage III cervical adenocarcinoma | Preoperative transcatheter arterial embolisation |
| Eisencop 1990[ | 58 | Radical hysterectomy & retroperitoneal lymph node dissection: stage IB cervical cancer | Non transfused vs transfused perioperatively |
| Florica 1991[ | 28 | Pelvic exenteration | Albumin infusion & crystalloids postoperatively |
| Look 1993[ | 97 | Squamous vulvar carcinoma | Non transfused vs transfused postoperatively |
| O'Dwyer 1993[ | 168 | Abdominal hysterectomy | Autologous blood transfusion |
| Kelley 1994[ | 8 | Extensive pelvic operations | Perioperative normovolemic hemodilution/homologous transfusion |
| Monk 1995[ | 134 | Radical hysterectomy: stage IA2-IIA cervical cancer | Non transfused vs transfused peri/postoperatively |
| Connor 1995[ | 31 | Radical hysterectomy for early cervical cancers | Intraoperative autologous blood collection & autotransfusion |
| Mirhashemi 1999[ | 50 | Radical hysterectomy type III for erly cervical cancer | Intraoperative autologous blood transfusion |
| Stovall 2001[ | Gynecologic cancer patients under chemotherapy | Epoetin Alpha | |
| Dildy 2006[ | 1 | hysterectomy | Pelvic pressure pack |
| Massiah 2006[ | 14 | Major gynaecological procedures | No transfusion(Jehovah's witnesses) |
| Nagarsheth 2007[ | 1 | leiomyosarcoma | Iron, folate, erythropoietin, uterine artery embolisation, recombinant VIIa, cell salvage, crystalloids |
| Nagarsheth 2009[ | 3 | Leiomyosarcoma, ovarian adenocarcinoma, pelvic mass | Blood salvage |