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Cardiovascular highlights from non-cardiology journals
  1. Alistair C Lindsay, Editor
  1. Correspondence to Dr A Lindsay, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headington, Oxford OX3 9BU, UK; alistair.lindsay{at}btinternet.com

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General cardiology

Blood transfusion overused following cardiac surgery

Although cardiac surgery is associated with a high rate of allogeneic blood transfusion, evidence about the optimal protocol for blood transfusion for patients undergoing heart surgery is lacking. The rationale for treatment is based on the fact that anaemia is an independent risk factor for morbidity and mortality following cardiac operations, but transfusions themselves have also been associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality in some recent studies.

The Transfusion Requirements After Cardiac Surgery Trial (TRACS) recruited 502 consecutive adult patients who underwent cardiac surgery. Patients were randomly assigned to a liberal strategy of blood transfusion (to maintain a haematocrit ≥30%) or to a restrictive strategy (haematocrit ≥24%). A composite end point of 30-day all-cause mortality and severe morbidity (cardiogenic shock, acute respiratory distress syndrome, or acute renal injury requiring dialysis or haemofiltration) was used. A non-inferiority margin of an 8% clinically important increase in occurrence of the composite end point was used.

A total of 198 of 253 patients in the liberal strategy group (78%) and 118 of 249 (47%) in the restrictive-strategy group received blood transfusion (p<0.01). Nonetheless, occurrence of the primary outcome measure was similar between the two groups (10% liberal vs 11% restrictive; p=0.85). Of note, independent of the transfusion strategy, the number of transfused red blood cell units was …

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Footnotes

  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.