Blood Transfusion ICU
Blood Transfusion ICU
Blood Transfusion ICU
By
Dr.Sherif Badrawy
Critical Care Registrar
HISTORY OF TRANSFUSION
Important dates:
1665: first recorded transfusion; between dogs
In 1667, blood transfusron from sheep to male
1795 first human-to-human transfusion
1901. description of blood groups
World War 1: development of blood banks
1960s-1970s: methods to separate whole blood,
prevent
antibody formation, and detect infections
EVOLUTION OF TRANSFUSION
BLOOD TRANSFUSION
Surgery.
Burns.
Adrenergic drug infusions.
Work of breathing e.g., during weaning.
Convulsions.
Anemia Frequency
3a
Anemia Cost
Associated with >twice inpatient costs in patients with
chronic conditions
Associated with increased length of stay in patients
with heart failure
4a
Taylor RW, O'Brien J, Trottier SJ, et al. Red blood cell transfusions and nosocomial
infections in critically ill patients. Crit Care Med. 2006;34(9):2302-2308.
4b
Bernard AC, Davenport DL, Chang PK, Vaughan TB, ZwischenbergerJB. Intraoperative transfusion of 1 U to 2 U packed
red blood cells is associated with increased 30-day mortality, surgical- site infection, pneumonia, and sepsis in general
surgery patients. J Am Coll Surg. 2009;208(5):931-937.
Hill SR, Carless PA, Henry DA, et al. Transfusion thresholds and other strategies for guiding allogeneic
red blood cell transfusion. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2002(2):CD002042.
Infections
stored RBCs
TRANSFUSION TRIGGER
Risk
Risk of
of low
low hemoglobin
hemoglobin
Risk of
of blood
blood transfusion
transfusion Risk
10/30?
8/24?
7/21?
Transfusion paradigms
Transfusion trigger:
hemoglobin or
hematocrit level
below which a blood
transfusion was to be
given. Most trials
compared outcomes
in patients
transfused at Hgb
thresholds between
7 and 10g/dL
TRANSFUSION LITERATURE
The current paradigm of the transfusion trigger of Hb 7
g/dL comes from the TRICC trial
It challenged the solid belief that high hemoglobin
values are safe, effective, and necessary in the critically
ill.
It triggered a more focused look at the physiology of
oxygen transport in the context of haemoglobin
availability
It raised the question of whether transfusion has
problems in its own right
STUDY DESIGN
The patients included were >16 years old, critically ill,
normovolaemic, non-bleeding, Hb <90 within 72 h of ICU
admission
FINDINGS
no difference in the the primary endpoint of mortality @ 30 days
increased complications in liberal strategy group
significant reduction in blood exposure in the more restrictive
group
significantly lower in-hospital mortality in the less sick (APACHE
20 OR LESS: 8.7 percent in the
restrictive-strategy group and 16.1 percent in the liberal-strategy
group, p = 0.03) and those aged <55y
in the restrictive transfusion strategy group
OUTCOMES
primary outcome was mortality at 45 days: 5% vs. 9%
in favour of restrictive approach
other secondary outcomes: further bleeding associated
with hemodynamic instability or Hgb drop 2
within 6 hours, number of RBCs transfused, cardiac
complications, transfusion reactions and mean LOS
Conclusion
Blood transfusion is an independent risk factor for:
morbidity and mortality
ICU admission
Hospital LOS
Increased cost
Massive Transfusion
MASSIVE TRANSFUSION
Settings
Trauma
Obstetric
Surgical
MASSIVE TRANSFUSION
Definitions
Replacement of one blood volume in a 24 hour period
Transfusion of >10 units RCC in 24 hours
Transfusion of 4 or more RCC within 1 hour when
ongoing need is foreseeable
Replacement of >50% of the total blood volume within
3 hours
MASSIVE TRANSFUSION
Now recognised DIC is a significant contribution: loss
of localisation microvascular damage
depletion of coagulation factors
In the massively transfused patient, platelets and
impaired platelet function are the most consistent
significant haematological abnormalities. Factor
deficiency is initially confined to factors V and VIII
T SOME HELP.
Contact Key Personnel
surgeon/ obstetrician
Blood Bank
Haematologist
Shock/hypoperfusion is the key underlying problem fix
it!
Control bleeding:
Early surgery (vs pre-op stabilisation)
TRALI
TRALI
hypoxia and bilateral pulmonary edema occurring during or within 6 h of
a transfusion in the absence of other causes such as cardiac failure or
intravascular volume overload
incidence is 1 in 5,000 U of plasma containing products (FFP, platelets
or whole blood)
Theories
(1) donor anti-granulocytic antibodies called leukoagglutinins in plasma
target recipient leucocyte antigens on neutrophils sequestered in the
lungs, resulting in an immune reaction
(2) biological response modifiers (BRMs) such as cytokines and
biologically active lipids (e.g. in aged cellular components) cause a lungmediated response
MANAGEMENT OF TRALI
stop transfusion
respiratory support (may require NIV or intubation)
lung protective ventilation if intubated
haemodynamic support if needed e.g. noradrenaline
supportive care and monitoring
no evidence for steroids
inform blood bank and haematology
PROGNOSIS OF TRALI
most recover within 48-96 hours
radiological changes often last 7 days
mortality 5%
PREVENTION of TRALI
limit transfusion of blood products
avoid donations (especially FFP) from multiparous women
Prophylaxis:
< 10 without associated risk or < 20 with additional risk factors
Keep > 50 in patients undergoing surgery or invasive procedures
< 50 in massive haemorrhage and < 100 in diffuse microvascular bleeding
FACTOR VIIA
recombinant protein
MECHANISM OF ACTION tissue factor + VIIa +
platelets -> platelet aggregation
production of platelet-fibrin matrix haemostasis
used in massive transfusion senarios to attempt to
control intractable haemorrhage
expensive
need platelets for rFVIIa to be effective
Multicentre RCT
n = 399 with acute intracerebral haemorrhage
single IV injection of recombinant factor VIIa (40, 80 or 160mcg/kg)
VS placebo within 1 hour of their base line CT head scan.
-> significant reduction in volume of haematoma on CT @ 24 hours
with therapy proportional to dose.
-> significant reduction in 30 day mortality without increase in
severely disabled patients.
-> no statistically significant increase in thromboembolic events
although there was a trend
GRANULOCYTES
- Used in profound & prolonged neutropenia secondary to
marrow suppression.
- Collected by : 1) filtration leukapheresis
-
CRYOPRECIPITATE
contains fibrinogen,v-Wfactor,VIII,XIII,fibronectin,
- conc. of fibrinogen in cryo > 10 times of FFP
Indications : 1) DIC, along with FFP
2) isolated
hypofibrinogenemia(<100mg/dl)
3) platelet dysfunction not
responding
to DDAVP/dialysis.
Dose : ~ one bag / 10 kg body weight
ANTI-THROMBIN CONCENTRATES :
- used in anti-thrombin deficiency
thrombophilia
GAMMA-GLOBULINS :
- in hypogammaglobulinemia,
- in high doses in autoimmune diseases
- SPECIFIC IMMUNOGLOBULINS :
- for prophylaxis in rhesus,tetanus,zoster,
Hep B.
- DOSAGE : 1gm loading dose in 10 mins f/b infusion of 1gm over 8hrs.
[lancet- 2010]