| Literature DB >> 28331607 |
Patrick Meybohm1, Bernd Froessler2, Lawrence T Goodnough3, Andrew A Klein4, Manuel Muñoz5, Michael F Murphy6, Toby Richards7, Aryeh Shander8, Donat R Spahn9, Kai Zacharowski1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: More than 30% of the world's population are anemic with serious medical and economic consequences. Red blood cell transfusion is the mainstay to correct anemia, but it is also one of the top five overused procedures and carries its own risk and cost burden. Patient blood management (PBM) is a patient-centered and multidisciplinary approach to manage anemia, minimize iatrogenic blood loss, and harness tolerance to anemia in an effort to improve patient outcome. Despite resolution 63.12 of the World Health Organization in 2010 endorsing PBM and current guidelines which include evidence-based recommendations on the use of diagnostic/therapeutic resources to provide better health care, many hospitals have yet to implement PBM in routine clinical practice. METHOD ANDEntities:
Keywords: Anemia; Patient blood management; Patient outcome
Year: 2017 PMID: 28331607 PMCID: PMC5356305 DOI: 10.1186/s13741-017-0061-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perioper Med (Lond) ISSN: 2047-0525
Summary of the simplified recommendations with level of evidence (LoE) and consensus of recommendation (CoR)
| Recommendations | LoE | CoR (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Comprehensive project management | ||
| Key leaders; involvement of stakeholders | C | 100 |
| Collection of PBM-related metrics | C | 90 |
| 2. Education program | ||
| Education initiatives; standard operating procedures, clinical protocols, visual aids, checklists; algorithms | C | 100 |
| Massive hemorrhage protocols; coagulation and transfusion algorithms | C | 100 |
| Online PBM e-learning course | C | 100 |
| Education at medical schools and hospital level | C | 100 |
| 3. Diagnosis and treatment of preoperative anemia | ||
| Preoperative screening, diagnosis, and treatment of anemia | B | 100 |
| Intravenous iron if oral iron is not tolerated or if surgery <4–6 weeks | B | 100 |
| Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents if nutritional deficiencies have been ruled out, corrected, or both | B | 100 |
| Elective surgery should be postponed until preoperative anemia has been classified and treated, if possible | C | 100 |
| 4. Reduction of iatrogenic diagnostic-/surgery-related blood loss | ||
| Avoiding unnecessary laboratory tests, lower frequency of sampling, using the smallest collection tube size | C | 100 |
| Closed in-line flush blood sampling devices for arterial (and central) lines | B | 100 |
| Appropriate cessation strategies for anticoagulation and antiplatelet therapy | C | 100 |
| Intraoperative approaches (meticulous hemostasis, minimally invasive surgery, laparoscopic surgery, diathermy dissection, physicians’ mindfulness regarding limiting blood loss, topical hemostatic agents) | B | 100 |
| Coagulation algorithm (preoperative assessment, ensuring basic conditions for hemostasis, reversal of anticoagulants, point-of-care diagnostics, optimized coagulation management, use of clotting factor concentrates) | B | 100 |
| Tranexamic acid | A | 100 |
| Autologous blood cell recovery (cell salvage) | A | 100 |
| 5. Optimal blood component use with patient-centered clinical decision support | ||
| Physician order entry with clinical decision support | B | 100 |
| Patient’s informed consent prior transfusion; hand-written/computer-generated forms with detailed outline of transfusion benefits, risks, and alternatives; information in discharge summary; patient’s own preferences | C | 80 |