| Literature DB >> 28319164 |
Arianna Simonetti1, Hussein Ezzeldin1, Mikhail Menis1, Stephen McKean2, Hector Izurieta1, Steven A Anderson1, Richard A Forshee1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although some studies have suggested that transfusion recipients may have better medical outcomes if transfused with red blood cell units stored for a short time, the overall body of evidence shows mixed results. It is important to understand how using fresher stored red blood cell units for certain patient groups may affect blood availability.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28319164 PMCID: PMC5358863 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Average percent of total RBC units transfused for each of the mutually exclusive, one or more, of the High Risk Groups (HRGs) from CMS during 2007-2012.
| ICU Only | 18.61% | 18.59% | 18.64% |
| CS Only | 7.68% | 7.63% | 7.73% |
| CCU Only | 4.72% | 4.71% | 4.73% |
| TR Only | 2.09% | 1.97% | 2.21% |
| CS ∩ ICU | 16.43% | 15.69% | 17.13% |
| CS ∩ CCU | 3.59% | 3.58% | 3.60% |
| ICU ∩ CCU | 1.76% | 1.73% | 1.78% |
| TR ∩ ICU | 1.23% | 1.15% | 1.31% |
| CS ∩ TR | 0.33% | 0.28% | 0.37% |
| TR ∩ CCU | 0.23% | 0.21% | 0.24% |
| CS ∩ ICU ∩ CCU | 3.85% | 3.69% | 4.01% |
| CS ∩ TR∩ ICU | 1.03% | 0.84% | 1.22% |
| CS ∩ TR ∩ CCU | 0.13% | 0.11% | 0.15% |
| TR ∩ ICU ∩ CCU | 0.11% | 0.10% | 0.12% |
| CS ∩ TR ∩ ICU ∩ CCU | 0.18% | 0.14% | 0.22% |
ICU = Intensive Care Unit, CS = Cardiac Surgery, CCU = Coronary Care Unit and TR = Trauma.∩ denotes a group of patients that include subjects belonging to two or more high-risk groups.
Percentage of total RBC units transfused and reported by the CMS database for the period 2007-2012 by type of scenario.
Scenario illustration (Venn diagrams), group description, and allocation method used for each scenario are also presented.
| Type of scenario | Group Description | Percentage of total RBC units transfused during 2007-2012 | Allocation Method a |
|---|---|---|---|
| All blood recipients receive current standard of care. | 100% | LO | |
| Any ICU patients | 43.2% | TM7 | |
| BBRs | 56.8% | LO | |
| Any CS patients | 33.2% | TM14 | |
| BBRs | 66.8% | LO | |
| Any CCU patients | 14.6% | TM14 | |
| BBRs | 85.4% | LO | |
| Any Trauma patients | 5.2% | TM28 | |
| BBRs | 94.8% | LO | |
| Any ICU patients + non-overlapping CS patients. | ICU = 43.2%, CS = 11.7% | TM7 | |
| ICU ∪ CS = 54.9% | TM14 | ||
| BBRs | 45.1% | LO | |
| All HRGs combined | 62% | TM7 or TM14 | |
| BBRs | 38% | LO |
ICU = Intensive Care Unit, CS = Cardiac Surgery, CCU = Coronary Care Unit, TR = Trauma and BBRs = Baseline Blood Recipients. a LO = Likely Oldest allocation method (1). TM7, TM14 and TM28 = ‘Threshold Method’, with age of RBCs equal or less than 7, 14, and 28 days, respectively. The ‘threshold’ ages of RBCs were recommended from literature[3,6].
b ∪ denotes union of two or more HRGs.
c ∩ denotes intersection between two HRGs.
d , denotes the complement of this group.
Fig 1The Annual Average Daily (AAD) numberof RBC units available in the system for: (A) Total Supply (collector + hospital, light blue bars), AAD estimated number of RBC units (red), and percent reduction in total supply with respect to baseline scenario (BBRs-LO) (above bars forscenarios 2 to 8); (B) Expired RBC Units, (collector + hospital, green bars) and AAD number of expired units at collectoronly are shown on bars; (C) AAD Unmet RBC Units by Age at the hospital (dark blue bars), the percentage of unmet units by age (above bars), and AAD age of the transfused blood at the hospital (above bars, red on grey background). The scenarios are sorted in a descending order according to their total supply. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals. AAD = annual average daily.
Fig 2The annual average daily (AAD) age of transfused blood units for each simulated scenario listed in Table 2.
We provide a description of each element of the half-pie chart from the inner to the outer layer, as follows: 1) percentage of total RBC units transfused among elderly for the overall HRGs (blue) versus BBRs (tan); 2) percentage of total RBC units transfused partitioned by HRGs (purple, orange and pink); 3) allocation method used foreach recipient group (HRGs – different shades of light blue; BBRs in teal); 4) AAD age of the blood transfused to each recipient group and the percentage of ‘met’ (green) and ‘unmet’ (red) RBC units by age forHRGs only (in parenthesis); and 5) AAD age of the overall transfused blood given to HRGs (bold red).