Department of Cardiovascular Sciences and National Institute for Health Research Leicester Biomedical Research Unit in Cardiovascular Medicine, College of Life Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Department of Cardiovascular Sciences and National Institute for Health Research Leicester Biomedical Research Unit in Cardiovascular Medicine, College of Life Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Br J Anaesth. 2021 Jan;126(1):149-156. doi: 10.1016/j.bja.2020.04.087. Epub 2020 Jun 30.
Patient blood management (PBM) interventions aim to improve clinical outcomes by reducing bleeding and transfusion. We assessed whether existing evidence supports the routine use of combinations of these interventions during and after major surgery.
Five systematic reviews and a National Institute of Health and Care Excellence health economic review of trials of common PBM interventions enrolling participants of any age undergoing surgery were updated. The last search was on June 1, 2019. Studies in trauma, burns, gastrointestinal haemorrhage, gynaecology, dentistry, or critical care were excluded. The co-primary outcomes were: risk of receiving red cell transfusion and 30-day or hospital all-cause mortality. Treatment effects were estimated using random-effects models and risk ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Heterogeneity assessments used I. Network meta-analyses used a frequentist approach. The protocol was registered prospectively (PROSPERO CRD42018085730).
Searches identified 393 eligible randomised controlled trials enrolling 54 917 participants. PBM interventions resulted in a reduction in exposure to red cell transfusion (RR=0.60; 95% CI 0.57, 0.63; I=77%), but had no statistically significant treatment effect on 30-day or hospital mortality (RR=0.93; 95% CI 0.81, 1.07; I=0%). Treatment effects were consistent across multiple secondary outcomes, sub-groups and sensitivity analyses that considered clinical setting, type of intervention, and trial quality. Network meta-analysis did not demonstrate additive benefits from the use of multiple interventions. No trial demonstrated that PBM was cost-effective.
In randomised trials, PBM interventions do not have important clinical benefits beyond reducing bleeding and transfusion in people undergoing major surgery.
患者血液管理(PBM)干预措施旨在通过减少出血和输血来改善临床结局。我们评估了在大型手术后常规使用这些干预措施组合是否有现有证据支持。
对纳入任何年龄段接受手术的常见 PBM 干预措施试验的五项系统评价和一项国家卫生与保健卓越研究所卫生经济学评价进行了更新。最后一次搜索是在 2019 年 6 月 1 日。排除了创伤、烧伤、胃肠道出血、妇科、牙科或重症监护中的研究。主要复合结局为:接受红细胞输血的风险和 30 天或住院全因死亡率。使用随机效应模型和风险比(RR)及其 95%置信区间(CI)估计治疗效果。使用 I 评估异质性。网络荟萃分析采用了似然法。方案在 PROSPERO 前瞻性注册(CRD42018085730)。
搜索确定了 393 项符合条件的随机对照试验,共纳入 54917 名参与者。PBM 干预措施可减少红细胞输血的暴露量(RR=0.60;95%CI 0.57,0.63;I=77%),但对 30 天或住院死亡率无统计学意义的治疗作用(RR=0.93;95%CI 0.81,1.07;I=0%)。治疗效果在多个次要结局、亚组和敏感性分析中是一致的,这些分析考虑了临床环境、干预类型和试验质量。网络荟萃分析没有表明使用多种干预措施具有附加益处。没有试验表明 PBM 具有成本效益。
在随机试验中,PBM 干预措施除了减少大型手术患者的出血和输血外,没有重要的临床获益。