Revisão Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Multimodal Patient Blood Management Program Based on a Three-pillar Strategy

2018; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 269; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/sla.0000000000003095

ISSN

1528-1140

Autores

Friederike C. Althoff, Holger Neb, Eva Herrmann, Kevin M. Trentino, Lee Vernich, Christoph Füllenbach, John Freedman, Jonathan H. Waters, Shannon L. Farmer, Michael F. Leahy, Kai Zacharowski, Patrick Meybohm, Suma Choorapoikayil,

Tópico(s)

Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare and Education

Resumo

To determine whether a multidisciplinary, multimodal Patient Blood Management (PBM) program for patients undergoing surgery is effective in reducing perioperative complication rate, and thereby is effective in improving clinical outcome.PBM is a medical concept with the focus on a comprehensive anemia management, to minimize iatrogenic (unnecessary) blood loss, and to harness and optimize patient-specific physiological tolerance of anemia.A systematic review and meta-analysis was performed. Eligible studies had to address each of the 3 PBM pillars with at least 1 measure per pillar, for example, preoperative anemia management plus cell salvage plus rational transfusion strategy. The study protocol has been registered with PROSPERO (CRD42017079217).Seventeen studies comprising 235,779 surgical patients were included in this meta-analysis (100,886 pre-PBM group and 134,893 PBM group). Implementation of PBM significantly reduced transfusion rates by 39% [risk ratio (RR) 0.61, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.55-0.68, P < 0.00001], 0.43 red blood cell units per patient (mean difference -0.43, 95% CI -0.54 to -0.31, P < 0.00001), hospital length of stay (mean difference -0.45, 95% CI -0.65 to -0.25, P < 0,00001), total number of complications (RR 0.80, 95% CI 0.74-0.88, P <0.00001), and mortality rate (RR 0.89, 95% CI 0.80-0.98, P = 0.02).Overall, a comprehensive PBM program addressing all 3 PBM pillars is associated with reduced transfusion need of red blood cell units, lower complication and mortality rate, and thereby improving clinical outcome. Thus, this first meta-analysis investigating a multimodal approach should motivate all executives and health care providers to support further PBM activities.

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