| Literature DB >> 35140245 |
Jeremy Meyer1,2,3, Roberto Cirocchi4, Salomone Di Saverio5, Frédéric Ris6,7, James Wheeler8, Richard Justin Davies8.
Abstract
Professional surgical societies recommend the identification and treatment of pre-operative anaemia in patients scheduled for abdominal surgery. Our aim was to determine if pre-operative iron allows correction of haemoglobin concentration and decreased incidence of peri-operative blood transfusion in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. MEDLINE, Embase and CENTRAL were searched for RCTs written in English and assessing the effect of pre-operative iron on the incidence of peri-operative allogeneic blood transfusion in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Pooled relative risk (RR), risk difference (RD) and mean difference (MD) were obtained using models with random effects. Heterogeneity was assessed using the Q-test and quantified using the I2 value. Four RCTs were retained for analysis out of 285 eligible articles. MD in haemoglobin concentration between patients with pre-operative iron and patients without pre-operative iron was of 0.81 g/dl (3 RCTs, 95% CI 0.30 to 1.33, I2: 60%, p = 0.002). Pre-operative iron did not lead to reduction in the incidence of peri-operative blood transfusion in terms of RD (4 RCTs, RD: - 0.13, 95% CI - 0.27 to 0.01, I2: 65%, p = 0.07) or RR (4 RCTs, RR: 0.57, 95% CI 0.30 to 1.09, I2: 64%, p = 0.09). To conclude, pre-operative iron significantly increases haemoglobin concentration by 0.81 g/dl before abdominal surgery but does not reduce the need for peri-operative blood transfusion. Important heterogeneity exists between existing RCTs in terms of populations and interventions. Future trials should target patients suffering from iron-deficiency anaemia and assess the effect of intervention on anaemia-related complications.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35140245 PMCID: PMC8828750 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-05283-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Authors | Year | Country | Acronyme | Period | Patients, n | Population | Intervention | Control | Primary outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Richards et al | 2020 | United Kingdom | PREVENTT | 01.2014–09.2018 | 135 | Major open abdominal surgery with anaemia | IV 1000 mg iron 10-42d before surgery | Placebo | Blood transfusion/death from randomization to POD30 |
| Froessler et al | 2016 | Australia | – | 08.2011–11.2014 | 72 | Major open abdominal surgery with iron-deficiency anaemia | IV 15 mg/kg ferric carboxymaltose 4-21d before surgery + 0.5 mg/ml blood loos if ≥ 100 ml before POD2 | Usual care | Blood transfusion |
| Lidder et al | 2007 | United Kingdom | – | – | 45 | Colorectal cancer surgery | Oral ferrous sulphate 200 mg 3×/day for 2 weeks before surgery | Usual care | Hemoglobin concentration |
| Edwards et al | 2009 | United Kingdom | – | 05.2006–08.2008 | 60 | Colorectal cancer surgery | IV 600 mg iron sucrose 14d before surgery | Placebo | Hemoglobin concentration at admission |
Figure 2Meta-analysis of the role of pre-operative iron on anaemia outcomes in patients undergoing abdominal surgery. Forest plot comparing pre-operative iron versus no pre-operative iron or placebo before abdominal surgery. Each horizontal bar summarizes a study. The bars represent 95% confidence intervals. The grey squares inform on each of the studies’ weight in the meta-analysis. The diamond in the lower part of the graph depicts the pooled estimate along with 95% confidence intervals. Pooled relative risk (RR), risk difference (RD) and mean difference (MD) were obtained using models with random effects. Heterogeneity was assessed using the Q-test and quantified using the I2 value. Risk of bias was assessed by using the Cochrane Collaboration’s tool for assessing risk of bias. (A) MD in haemoglobin concentration at admission, (B) RD for peri-operative allogeneic blood transfusion, (C) RR for peri-operative allogeneic blood transfusion. Data for the RCT by Richards et al. were extracted from Table 2 of their article including large blood transfusions for the number of patients who received blood transfusion, and reconstituted from the text (which reported a MD of 4.7 g/l and from Figure 2 for the mean haemoglobin concentration).
Figure 3Funnel plots for assessing the risk of publication bias. The standard error is plotted as a function of the observed effect estimate. Vertical bars correspond to pooled estimates from a random effects meta-analysis.