Walsh Timothy S, Garrioch Magnus, Maciver Caroline, Lee Robert J, MacKirdy Fiona, McClelland D Brian, Kinsella John, Wallis Charles
Scottish Intensive Care Society, the Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service, the Medical Statistics Unit, Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, Scotland.
Transfusion. 2004 Oct;44(10):1405-11. doi: 10.1111/j.1537-2995.2004.04085.x.
Anemia commonly complicates critical illness. Restrictive transfusion triggers are appropriate in this setting, but no large studies have measured red cell (RBC) requirements for intensive care patients when evidence-based transfusion guidelines are followed consistently.
Data were recorded daily for 1023 of 1042 sequential admissions to 10 intensive care units (ICUs) over 100 days. The sample comprised 44 percent of all ICU admissions in Scotland during this period. RBC transfusions and the occurrence of clinically significant hemorrhage were recorded for every ICU day. Transfusion episodes were classified as either associated with or not associated with hemorrhage. Measures of RBC use were derived for the cohort and for Scotland with national audit data.
A total of 39.5 percent (95% confidence interval [CI], 36.5%-42.5%) of admissions received transfusions. Eighteen percent of admissions received at least one transfusion associated with hemorrhage and 26 percent received at least one transfusion not associated with hemorrhage. The median (interquartile range) transfusion trigger in the absence of hemorrhage was 78 (73-78) g/L. The overall mean RBC use was 1.87 (95% CI, 1.79-1.96) units per admission or 0.34 (95% CI, 0.33-0.36) units per ICU-day. Forty-seven percent of RBCs administered were not associated with clinically significant hemorrhage. Mean RBC requirements for intensive care in Scotland were estimated to be 3950 (95% CI, 3780-4140) per million-adult-population per year. This represented 7 to 8 percent of the Scottish blood supply.
Despite evidence-based transfusion practice, 40 percent of ICU patients receive transfusions, which account for 7 to 8 percent of the national blood supply.
贫血常使危重病病情复杂化。在这种情况下,限制性输血触发策略是合适的,但尚无大型研究在始终遵循循证输血指南的情况下,测定重症监护患者的红细胞(RBC)需求量。
在100天内,对10个重症监护病房(ICU)连续收治的1042例患者中的1023例每日进行数据记录。该样本占此期间苏格兰所有ICU收治患者的44%。记录每个ICU日的RBC输注情况及具有临床意义的出血事件。输血事件分为与出血相关或与出血无关两类。利用全国审计数据得出该队列及苏格兰的RBC使用量指标。
共有39.5%(95%置信区间[CI],36.5% - 42.5%)的收治患者接受了输血。18%的收治患者接受了至少一次与出血相关的输血,26%的患者接受了至少一次与出血无关的输血。无出血情况下的输血触发阈值中位数(四分位间距)为78(73 - 78)g/L。每次收治的总体平均RBC使用量为1.87(95%CI,1.79 - 1.96)单位,或每个ICU日0.34(95%CI,0.33 - 0.36)单位。所输注的RBC中有47%与具有临床意义的出血无关。据估计,苏格兰重症监护的平均RBC需求量为每年每百万成年人口3950(95%CI,3780 - 4140)单位。这占苏格兰血液供应量的7%至8%。
尽管采用了循证输血做法,但仍有40%的ICU患者接受输血,这占全国血液供应量的7%至8%。