Olupot-Olupot Peter, Engoru Charles, Thompson Jennifer, Nteziyaremye Julius, Chebet Martin, Ssenyondo Tonny, Dambisya Cornelius M, Okuuny Vicent, Wokulira Ronald, Amorut Denis, Ongodia Paul, Mpoya Ayub, Williams Thomas N, Uyoga Sophie, Macharia Alex, Gibb Diana M, Walker A Sarah, Maitland Kathryn
Kilifi Clinical Trials Facility, KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, PO Box 230, Kilifi, Kenya.
BMC Med. 2014 Apr 25;12:67. doi: 10.1186/1741-7015-12-67.
Severe anemia (SA, hemoglobin <6 g/dl) is a leading cause of pediatric hospital admission in Africa, with significant in-hospital mortality. The underlying etiology is often infectious, but specific pathogens are rarely identified. Guidelines developed to encourage rational blood use recommend a standard volume of whole blood (20 ml/kg) for transfusion, but this is commonly associated with a frequent need for repeat transfusion and poor outcome. Evidence is lacking on what hemoglobin threshold criteria for intervention and volume are associated with the optimal survival outcomes.
We evaluated the safety and efficacy of a higher volume of whole blood (30 ml/kg; Tx30: n = 78) against the standard volume (20 ml/kg; Tx20: n = 82) in Ugandan children (median age 36 months (interquartile range (IQR) 13 to 53)) for 24-hour anemia correction (hemoglobin >6 g/dl: primary outcome) and 28-day survival.
Median admission hemoglobin was 4.2 g/dl (IQR 3.1 to 4.9). Initial volume received followed the randomization strategy in 155 (97%) patients. By 24-hours, 70 (90%) children in the Tx30 arm had corrected SA compared to 61 (74%) in the Tx20 arm; cause-specific hazard ratio = 1.54 (95% confidence interval 1.09 to 2.18, P = 0.01). From admission to day 28 there was a greater hemoglobin increase from enrollment in Tx30 (global P <0.0001). Serious adverse events included one non-fatal allergic reaction and one death in the Tx30 arm. There were six deaths in the Tx20 arm (P = 0.12); three deaths were adjudicated as possibly related to transfusion, but none secondary to volume overload.
A higher initial transfusion volume prescribed at hospital admission was safe and resulted in an accelerated hematological recovery in Ugandan children with SA. Future testing in a large, pragmatic clinical trial to establish the effect on short and longer-term survival is warranted.
ClinicalTrials.Gov identifier: NCT01461590 registered 26 October 2011.
重度贫血(SA,血红蛋白<6 g/dl)是非洲儿童住院的主要原因,院内死亡率较高。其潜在病因通常为感染性,但很少能确定具体病原体。为鼓励合理用血而制定的指南推荐标准全血输注量(20 ml/kg),但这通常与频繁需要重复输血及不良预后相关。关于何种血红蛋白干预阈值标准和输注量与最佳生存结局相关,目前尚无证据。
我们评估了乌干达儿童(中位年龄36个月(四分位间距(IQR)13至53))中,较高全血输注量(30 ml/kg;Tx30组:n = 78)相对于标准输注量(20 ml/kg;Tx20组:n = 82)在24小时内纠正贫血(血红蛋白>6 g/dl:主要结局)及28天生存方面的安全性和有效性。
入院时血红蛋白中位数为4.2 g/dl(IQR 3.1至4.9)。155例(97%)患者最初接受的输注量遵循随机分组策略。到24小时时,Tx30组70例(90%)儿童纠正了重度贫血,而Tx20组为61例(74%);病因特异性风险比 = 1.54(95%置信区间1.09至2.18,P = 0.01)。从入院到第28天,Tx30组从入组时起血红蛋白升高幅度更大(总体P<0.0001)。严重不良事件包括Tx30组1例非致命过敏反应和1例死亡。Tx20组有6例死亡(P = 0.12);3例死亡判定可能与输血有关,但均非容量超负荷所致。
入院时规定较高的初始输血量是安全的,且能使乌干达重度贫血儿童的血液学恢复加快。有必要在大型实用临床试验中进一步测试,以确定其对短期和长期生存的影响。
ClinicalTrials.Gov标识符:NCT01461590,于2011年10月26日注册。