MD, Division of General Internal Medicine, UMDNJ–Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, 125 Paterson Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08903, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2012 Jul 3;157(1):49-58. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-157-1-201206190-00429.
Although approximately 85 million units of red blood cells (RBCs) are transfused annually worldwide, transfusion practices vary widely. The AABB (formerly, the American Association of Blood Banks) developed this guideline to provide clinical recommendations about hemoglobin concentration thresholds and other clinical variables that trigger RBC transfusions in hemodynamically stable adults and children.
These guidelines are based on a systematic review of randomized clinical trials evaluating transfusion thresholds. We performed a literature search from 1950 to February 2011 with no language restrictions. We examined the proportion of patients who received any RBC transfusion and the number of RBC units transfused to describe the effect of restrictive transfusion strategies on RBC use. To determine the clinical consequences of restrictive transfusion strategies, we examined overall mortality, nonfatal myocardial infarction, cardiac events, pulmonary edema, stroke, thromboembolism, renal failure, infection, hemorrhage, mental confusion, functional recovery, and length of hospital stay. RECOMMENDATION 1: The AABB recommends adhering to a restrictive transfusion strategy (7 to 8 g/dL) in hospitalized, stable patients (Grade: strong recommendation; high-quality evidence). RECOMMENDATION 2: The AABB suggests adhering to a restrictive strategy in hospitalized patients with preexisting cardiovascular disease and considering transfusion for patients with symptoms or a hemoglobin level of 8 g/dL or less (Grade: weak recommendation; moderate-quality evidence). RECOMMENDATION 3: The AABB cannot recommend for or against a liberal or restrictive transfusion threshold for hospitalized, hemodynamically stable patients with the acute coronary syndrome (Grade: uncertain recommendation; very low-quality evidence). RECOMMENDATION 4: The AABB suggests that transfusion decisions be influenced by symptoms as well as hemoglobin concentration (Grade: weak recommendation; low-quality evidence).
尽管全世界每年大约要输注 8500 万单位的红细胞(RBC),但输血实践存在很大差异。AABB(前身为美国血库协会)制定本指南,旨在为血流动力学稳定的成人和儿童提供有关血红蛋白浓度阈值和其他触发 RBC 输注的临床变量的临床建议。
这些指南基于对评估输血阈值的随机临床试验的系统评价。我们进行了一次文献检索,检索时间从 1950 年至 2011 年 2 月,不限制语言。我们检查了接受任何 RBC 输注的患者比例和输注的 RBC 单位数,以描述限制输血策略对 RBC 使用的影响。为了确定限制输血策略的临床后果,我们检查了总体死亡率、非致死性心肌梗死、心脏事件、肺水肿、中风、血栓栓塞、肾功能衰竭、感染、出血、神志不清、功能恢复和住院时间。建议 1:AABB 建议在住院的稳定患者中遵循限制输血策略(7 至 8 g/dL)(强烈推荐;高质量证据)。建议 2:AABB 建议在患有先前存在的心血管疾病的住院患者中遵循限制策略,并考虑对有症状或血红蛋白水平为 8 g/dL 或更低的患者进行输血(弱推荐;中质量证据)。建议 3:AABB 不能推荐或反对对急性冠脉综合征住院血流动力学稳定的患者采用宽松或限制输血阈值(不确定推荐;极低质量证据)。建议 4:AABB 建议输血决策受症状和血红蛋白浓度的影响(弱推荐;低质量证据)。