| Literature DB >> 35779099 |
Michael G Fadel1, Ishaan Patel2, Lawrence O'Leary2, Nebil Behar2, James Brewer2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Blood typing, or group and save (G&S) testing, is commonly performed prior to cholecystectomy and appendectomy in many hospitals. In order to determine whether G&S testing is required prior to these procedures, we set out to evaluate the relevant literature and associated rates of perioperative blood transfusion.Entities:
Keywords: Appendectomy; Blood transfusion; Blood typing; Cholecystectomy; Group and save testing; Type and screen
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35779099 PMCID: PMC9468044 DOI: 10.1007/s00423-022-02600-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Langenbecks Arch Surg ISSN: 1435-2443 Impact factor: 2.895
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of studies in this systematic review
Summary of studies assessing number of patients who underwent group and save testing and perioperative blood transfusion rates in cholecystectomy procedures
| Authors, year | Study type, institution and location | Type of cholecystectomy procedure performed, | Total number of patients who underwent cholecystectomy, | Preoperative G&S testing, | Definition of perioperative blood transfusion | Patients who received perioperative blood transfusion stratified by type of procedure, | Quality of study* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barrett-Lee et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Emergency laparoscopic: 23 Emergency converted-to-open: 2 | 25 | 514 out of 562 (91.5)† | Not defined | Total: 0 (0.0) | Acceptable |
| Beloeil et al. [ | Retrospective study, hospitals nationwide in France | Emergency and elective laparoscopic‡ | 459,615 | 170,749 (37.2) | Within 48 h of procedure | Total: 9652 (2.1) | Acceptable |
| Blank et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital in Australia | Emergency and elective laparoscopic: 1110 Emergency and elective converted-to-open: 10 | 1120 | – | During index admission | Total: 18 (1.6) Emergency and elective laparoscopic: 16 (1.4) Emergency and elective converted-to-open: 2 (20) | Acceptable |
| Fong et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Emergency and elective laparoscopic: 962 Emergency and elective converted-to-open: 40 | 1002 | 896 (89.4) | Not defined | Total: 12 (1.2) Emergency and elective laparoscopic: 6 (0.6) Emergency and elective converted-to-open: 6 (15) | Acceptable |
| Ghirardo et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital in the USA | Emergency laparoscopic: 683 Emergency open: 28 Elective laparoscopic: 454 Elective open: 2 | 1167 | – | On day of or day after procedure | Total: 5 (0.4) Emergency laparoscopic: 4 (0.6) Emergency open: 1 (3.6) Elective laparoscopic: 0 (0.0) Elective open: 0 (0.0) | Acceptable |
| Hack-Adams et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Elective laparoscopic | 53 | 17 (32.0) | Intraoperative | Total: 0 (0.0) | Acceptable |
| Hamza et al. [ | Retrospective study, three hospitals in the UK | Elective laparoscopic | 913 | 913 (100) | Not defined | Total: 8 (0.9) | Acceptable |
| Li and Low [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Emergency laparoscopic: 11 Elective laparoscopic: 482 | 493 | 483 (98.0) | Not defined | Total: 2 (0.40) Emergency laparoscopic: 0 (0.0) Elective laparoscopic: 2 (0.4) | Acceptable |
| Lin et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital in Taiwan | Elective laparoscopic | 71 | 6 (8.5) | On day of procedure | Total: 1 (1.4) | Acceptable |
| Quinn et al. [ | Retrospective study, hospitals across a Scottish region | Emergency and elective, laparoscopic and open‡ | 4462 | 2916 (65.4) | Not defined | Total: 48 (1.1) | Acceptable |
| Tandon et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Elective laparoscopic | 2079 | 934 (44.9) | Not defined | Total: 12 (0.6) | Acceptable |
| Thomson et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Emergency and elective laparoscopic‡ | 293 | 264 (90.1) | Not defined | Total: 0 (0.0) | Acceptable |
| Usal et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital in the USA | Emergency and elective laparoscopic: 2589 Emergency and elective open: 603 | 3192 | – | Not defined | Total: 45 (1.4) Emergency and elective laparoscopic: 12 (0.5) Emergency and elective open: 33 (5.5) | Acceptable |
*Quality assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Studies Reporting Prevalence Data [14]: see supplementary material Table S1 for details of these assessments. ‡Number of each type of procedure not specified; †data not subdivided between cholecystectomy and appendectomy therefore these figures include all procedures in the study (n = 562); – exact number unknown. G&S, group and save; UK, United Kingdom; USA, United States of America
Summary of studies assessing number of patients who underwent group and save testing and perioperative blood transfusion rates in appendectomy procedures
| Authors, year | Study type, institution and location | Type of appendectomy procedure performed, n | Total number of patients who underwent appendectomy, | Preoperative G&S testing, | Definition of perioperative blood transfusion | Patients who received perioperative blood transfusion stratified by type of procedure, | Quality of study* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barrett-Lee et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Emergency laparoscopic: 446 Emergency converted-to-open: 23 | 469 | 514 out of 562 (91.5)† | Not defined | Total: 0 (0.0) | Acceptable |
| Blank et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital in Australia | Emergency and elective, laparoscopic and open‡ | 751 | – | During index admission | Total: 2 (0.3) | Acceptable |
| Farrell et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital trust in the UK | Emergency laparoscopic: 603 Emergency open: 42 | 645 | – | Not defined | Total: 1 (0.2) | Acceptable |
| Ghirardo et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital in the USA | Emergency and elective laparoscopic: 613 Emergency and elective open: 113 | 726 | – | On day of or day after procedure | Total: 1 (0.1) Emergency laparoscopic: 1 (0.2) Emergency open: 0 (0.0) | Acceptable |
| Magowan et al. [ | Retrospective study, single hospital in the UK | Emergency laparoscopic: 282 Emergency converted-to-open: 28 Emergency open: 51 | 361 | 361 (100) | Within 30 days of index admission | Total: 0 (0.0) | Acceptable |
*Quality assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Studies Reporting Prevalence Data [14]: see supplementary material Table S1 for details of these assessments. ‡Number of each type of procedure not specified; †data not subdivided between cholecystectomy and appendectomy therefore these figures include all procedures in the study (n = 562); – exact number unknown. G&S, group and save; UK, United Kingdom; USA, United States of America
Summary of studies assessing patient and operative risk factors for blood transfusion where described. ASA, American Society of Anaesthesiologists physical status classification system; Hb, haemoglobin; INR, international normalised ratio; RR, relative risk
| Authors, year | Operation performed | Patients who received and timing of perioperative blood transfusion, | Summary of reported patient and operative risk factors for transfusion, |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fong et al. [ | Cholecystectomy | Total: 12 Preoperative optimisation: 2 Intraoperative: 5 Postoperative within 48 h of procedure: 4 Postoperative > 48 h of procedure: 1 No emergency blood issued nor major vascular injury reported | Moderate preoperative anaemia (Hb < 100 g/L): 7 (58.3) Septic coagulopathy (INR > 1.4): 5 (41.6) Use of oral anticoagulant on admission: 1 (8.3) Conversion-to-open: 6 (50.0; RR compared to completed laparoscopic cholecystectomy: 24.2) Subtotal cholecystectomy: 3 (25.0; RR compared to total cholecystectomy: 10.9) |
| Ghirardo et al. [ | Appendectomy | Total: 1 Postoperative day one | Rectus sheath haematoma: 1 (100) |
| Ghirardo et al. [ | Cholecystectomy | Total: 5 No emergency blood issued | Moderate preoperative anaemia (Hb < 100 g/L)/primary haematological malignancy: 1 (20.0) Coagulopathy (including use of anticoagulants): 2 (40.0) Open or conversion-to-open: 2 (40.0; RR compared to completed laparoscopic cholecystectomy: 15.2) |
| Li and Low [ | Cholecystectomy | Total: 2 Postoperative at 4 and 7 h | ASA II: 1 (50.0) ASA III: 1 (50.0) |
| Quinn et al. [ | Cholecystectomy | Total: 48 Preoperative optimisation: 2 Intraoperative: 18 Postoperative: 13 Secondary to re-operation for complications of index procedure: 8 Not documented: 7 | Vascular injury: 2 (4.2) Solid organ injury: 6 (12.5) Conversion-to-open: 9 (18.8) ASA III: 2 (4.2) Jaundice: 2 (4.2) Preoperative anticoagulation: 4 (8.3) Primary haematological malignancy: 6 (12.5) |
| Tandon et al. [ | Cholecystectomy | Total: 12 All postoperative | ASA I: 2 (16.6) ASA II: 8 (66.6) ASA III: 1 (8.3) ASA IV: 1 (8.3) Significant intraoperative haemorrhage: 10 (83.3) Faecal peritonitis following laparoscopic converted-to-open: 1 (8.3) Postoperative bile leak: 1 (8.3) |
| Usal et al. [ | Cholecystectomy | Total: 45 Emergency intraoperative transfusion: 2 | Relevant risk factors shown below Major vascular injury: 3 (6.6) Cardiovascular co-morbidity: 16 (35.5) Respiratory co-morbidity: 2 (4.4) Chronic kidney disease: 4 (8.8) Diabetes mellitus: 3 (6.6) |
Summary of the findings and reported conclusions of the studies included in the systematic review regarding the need for routine group and save testing. G&S, group and save; MSBOS, maximum surgical blood ordering schedule
| Authors, year | Summary of study findings | Authors conclude that routine preoperative G&S testing may not be necessary |
|---|---|---|
| Barrett-Lee et al. [ | Routine G&S not warranted as low rate of blood transfusion. A more targeted approach required for preoperative G&S and the use of O negative blood is recommended in the rare event of acute haemorrhage from major vessel injury | Yes |
| Beloeil et al. [ | Standard ABO blood typing is still routinely prescribed before surgery and anaesthesia. This over-prescription represents a high and unnecessary cost and should therefore be addressed | Yes |
| Blank et al. [ | Transfusion rates are low and therefore routine G&S testing for appendectomy is not recommended. Generated site-specific MSBOS is more of an efficient method | Yes |
| Farrell et al. [ | Cross-match on an as required basis and use of O negative where urgent blood is required. Huge cost saving with very little impact on demand for O negative blood. Routine G&S testing is unnecessary as rate of transfusion in appendectomy is extremely low | Yes |
| Fong et al. [ | Low transfusion rate and patients who did not have a valid G&S sample did not require a transfusion. Patients requiring transfusions were predictable from their pre-operative clinical status—anaemia, sepsis and coagulopathy. Proposed that a highly selective opt-in G&S policy is safe. This would not compromise patient safety and would lead to significant cost savings | Yes |
| Ghirardo et al. [ | Routine G&S is not required in absence of preoperative indications. Cholecystectomy is safe with a low transfusion rate. O negative blood has already been screened for the presence of most significant non-ABO antibodies | Yes |
| Hack-Adams et al. [ | Patients over investigated and routine G&S testing should be eliminated | Yes |
| Hamza et al. [ | Routine G&S is unnecessary | Yes |
| Li and Low [ | A preoperative G&S test did not impact management for any patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy. It should not form part of the routine work-up, although it may still be required for high-risk cases | Yes |
| Lin et al. [ | G&S may be safely disregarded | Yes |
| Magowan et al. [ | G&S tests are unnecessary and ceasing their requirement as standard may result in significant financial savings. Clinical judgement and the need for various preoperative investigations should be judged on a case-by-case basis by the patient’s surgical and anaesthetic team | Yes |
| Quinn et al. [ | Routine use of G&S is not justified. A targeted approach for high risk individuals will reduce demand on blood transfusion service without detriment to patient care | Yes |
| Tandon et al. [ | Routine G&S testing is unnecessary. It neither alters the management of severe hypovolaemia secondary to perioperative bleeding, nor does it lead to better outcomes | Yes |
| Thomson et al. [ | Abandon preoperative G&S | Yes |
| Usal et al. [ | Eliminate routine G&S | Yes |
Summary of the reported and calculated costs of group and save sample per study cohort and per year
| Authors, year | Cost per G&S sample (£) | Total cost per study cohort (£) | Total cost per year (£) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barrett-Lee et al. [ | 17.29 | 23,131 | 7710 |
| Farrell et al. [ | 17.50 | 22,470 | 7490 |
| Fong et al. [ | 20.00 | 39,600 | 15,840 |
| Ghirardo et al. [ | 21.30 | 39,050 | 19,525 |
| Hamza et al. [ | 17.24 | 13,280 | 13,280 |
| Li and Low [ | 15.00 | 22,075 | 22,075 |
| Magowan et al. [ | 25.40 | 18,346 | 18,346 |
| Quinn et al. [ | 20.00 | 80,140 | 11,449 |
| Thomson et al. [ | 18.37 | 7850 | 3925 |
| Usal et al. [ | 17.75 | 56,658 | 9443 |
*Converted from $ to pounds. G&S, group and save