| Literature DB >> 35072726 |
Sarah H O'Brien1, Sherif M Badawy2,3, Seth J Rotz4, Mona D Shah5, Julie Makarski6, Rachel S Bercovitz2,3, Mary-Jane S Hogan7, Lori Luchtman-Jones8,9, Julie A Panepinto10, Ginna M Priola11, Char M Witmer12, Julie A Wolfson13, Marianne Yee14,15, Lisa K Hicks16.
Abstract
Choosing Wisely is a medical stewardship and quality-improvement initiative led by the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation in collaboration with leading medical societies in the United States. The American Society of Hematology (ASH) has been an active participant in the Choosing Wisely project. In 2019, ASH and the American Society of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology (ASPHO) formed a joint task force to solicit, evaluate, and select items for a pediatric-focused Choosing Wisely list. By using an iterative process and an evidence-based method, the ASH-ASPHO Task Force identified 5 hematologic tests and treatments that health care providers and patients should question because they are not supported by evidence, and/or they involve risks of medical and financial costs with low likelihood of benefit. The ASH-ASPHO Choosing Wisely recommendations are as follows: (1) avoid routine preoperative hemostatic testing in an otherwise healthy child with no previous personal or family history of bleeding, (2) avoid platelet transfusion in asymptomatic children with a platelet count >10 × 103/μL unless an invasive procedure is planned, (3) avoid thrombophilia testing in children with venous access-associated thrombosis and no positive family history, (4) avoid packed red blood cells transfusion for asymptomatic children with iron deficiency anemia and no active bleeding, and (5) avoid routine administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor for prophylaxis of children with asymptomatic autoimmune neutropenia and no history of recurrent or severe infections. We recommend that health care providers carefully consider the anticipated risks and benefits of these identified tests and treatments before performing them.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35072726 PMCID: PMC8791561 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2020003635
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529
Guiding principles for the ASH Choosing Wisely campaign
| 1. Harm avoidance | Recommendations should aim to reduce potential harm to patients. |
| 2. Evidence | Recommendations should be evidence-based. |
| 3. Cost | Recommendations should aim to decrease the cost of health care. |
| 4. Frequency | Recommendations should target tests, procedures, or treatments that are common. |
| 5. Purview of the hematologist | Recommendations should target tests, procedures, or treatments within the purview of the hematologist. |
| 6. Impact | Recommendations that are likely to have a greater impact (lead to greater positive changes) should be prioritized over those of lesser impact. |
ASH-ASPHO 2019 Choosing Wisely campaign
| Recommendation | Key references |
|---|---|
| 1. Don’t perform routine preoperative hemostatic testing (PT, aPTT) in an otherwise healthy child with no previous personal or family history of bleeding. |
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| 2. Don’t transfuse platelets in an asymptomatic (ie, nonbleeding) pediatric patient with hypoproliferative thrombocytopenia (eg, aplastic anemia, leukemia), with a platelet count >10 × 103/μL who is at least 1 year old unless signs and/or symptoms for bleeding develop or the patient is to undergo an invasive procedure. |
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| 3. Don’t order thrombophilia testing on children with venous access (ie, peripheral or central)–associated thrombosis in the absence of a positive family history. | [ |
| 4. Don’t transfuse packed red blood cells (pRBCs) for iron deficiency anemia in asymptomatic pediatric patients when there is no evidence of hemodynamic instability or active bleeding. |
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| 5. Don’t routinely administer granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) for empiric treatment of pediatric patients with asymptomatic autoimmune neutropenia in the absence of recurrent or severe bacterial and/or fungal infections. |
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