| Literature DB >> 30559962 |
Akshay Shah1, Antony J R Palmer2, Sheila A Fisher3, Shah M Rahman4, Susan Brunskill3, Carolyn Doree3, Jack Reid5, Anita Sugavanam5, Simon J Stanworth1,4,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Guidelines to treat anaemia with intravenous (IV) iron have focused on elective surgical patients with little attention paid to those undergoing non-elective/emergency surgery. Whilst these patients may experience poor outcomes because of their presenting illness, observational data suggests that untreated anaemia may also be a contributing factor to poor outcomes. We conducted a systematic review to investigate the safety and efficacy of IV iron in patients undergoing non-elective surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Anaemia; Iron; Surgery
Year: 2018 PMID: 30559962 PMCID: PMC6290500 DOI: 10.1186/s13741-018-0109-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perioper Med (Lond) ISSN: 2047-0525
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram
Characteristics of the included trials
| Study | Serrano-Trenas et al. ( | Mudge et al. ( | Bernabeu-Wittel et al. ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient population | Age > 65 undergoing hip fracture surgery | Adults undergoing living-donor or deceased-donor kidney transplantation | Age > 65 requiring hip fracture surgery with Hb levels between 90 and 120 g/L |
| Country | Spain | Australia | Spain |
| No. of centres | 1 | 1 | 13 |
| No. of patients randomised | 200 | 102 | 303 |
| Intervention | 600 mg of IV iron sucrose (Venofer) in three doses of 200 mg at 48-h intervals | 500 mg of IV iron polymatose on the 4th postoperative day | 3 arms |
| Comparator | Usual care | 210 mg of oral slow release ferrous sulfate daily until primary endpoint was reached | Subcutaneous single dose placebo and IV placebo (saline) |
| Primary outcome(s) | • Number and rate of patients transfused postoperatively in each arm | • Resolution of anaemia defined as haemoglobin concentration more than or equal to 11 g/dL for both men and women | • Percentage of patients who received an RBC transfusion during hospitalisation and after 60 days from hospital discharge |
| Secondary outcome(s) | • Mean number of RBCs per patient | • Gastrointestinal symptoms | • Number of RBC transfusions per patient |
Hb haemoglobin, ESA erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, EPO erythropoietin, HRQoL health-related quality of life, RBC red blood cell
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary for all included trials. a Infection. b Mean haemoglobin (short-term ≤ 7 days)
Fig. 3Forest plots of the effect of intravenous iron on primary outcomes. Hb = haemoglobin, CI = confidence interval, M-H = Mantel-Haenszel, IV = inverse-variance. a Requirement for RBC transfusion. b Mean number of RBCs transfused. c Short-term mortality (≤ 30 days)
Fig. 4Forest plots of the effect of intravenous iron on secondary outcomes. RBC = red blood cell, Hb = haemoglobin, CI = confidence interval, M-H = Mantel-Haenszel, IV = inverse-variance
Fig. 5Trial sequential analysis (TSA) of all trials of the effect of IV iron on the risk of requiring a blood transfusion. Control event proportion of 40%, diversity (D2) of 9%, alpha of 5%, power of 80% and relative risk decrease (RRR) of 20%. The accrued sample size (403) has not reached the required information size (1131)