1 / 47

Is Fresh Blood better than Old Blood ?

Is Fresh Blood better than Old Blood ?. 1667 – Jean Baptiste Denis. First successful human-human transfusion. Early 1800’s. 1900 – Karl Landsteiner. Won the 1930 Nobel Peace Prize Isolated the A, B, & O blood types. Type AB blood was identified two years later. Recruit Transfuse blood

kaveri
Download Presentation

Is Fresh Blood better than Old Blood ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Is Fresh Blood better than Old Blood ?

  2. 1667 – Jean Baptiste Denis

  3. First successful human-human transfusion Early 1800’s

  4. 1900 – Karl Landsteiner Won the 1930 Nobel Peace Prize Isolated the A, B, & O blood types. Type AB blood was identified two years later.

  5. RecruitTransfuse blood Screen DonorPretransfusion Testing Collect & PrepareMonitor & evaluate Infections/disease testsMedical Decision to transfuse Blood Safety Transfusion Safety Transfusion Safety in the Hospital Transfusion Sept 2003

  6. Red Blood Cells

  7. Problems with stored pRBC’s Reduced ability of Hgb to release bound oxygen at tissue level (2,3 DPG)

  8. 2,3 DPG levels become undetectable after two weeks of storage. Levels are restored within 72 hours after transfusion Does red blood cell storage affect clinical outcome? When in doubt, do the experiment. Transfusion Vol 49 July 2009

  9. Problems with stored pRBC’s Reduced ability of Hgb to release bound oxygen at tissue level (2,3 DPG). Reduced RBC deformability = potential to block capillary beds

  10. RBC squeezing through a capillary bed

  11. Problems with stored pRBC’s Reduced ability of Hgb to release bound oxygen at tissue level (2,3 DPG).. Reduced RBC deformability = potential to block capillary beds Storage lesion (age dependent defect) = potential to block capillary beds

  12. Problems with stored pRBC’s Reduced ability of Hgb to release bound oxygen at tissue level (2,3 DPG) Reduced RBC deformability = potential to block capillary beds Storage lesion (age dependent defect) = potential to block capillary beds Activation of recipients immune system

  13. Transfusions & Infection Each unit of blood increases the risk of a nosocomial infection by up to 50%! Transfusion increases the risk of postoperative infections after cardiovascular surgery J Am Coll Surg 2006 Jan;202 An alternative scoring system to predict risk for surgical site infection complicaating coronary artery bypass graft surgery Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2007 Oct; Transfusion of red cells is associated with increased incidence of bacterial infection after colorectal surgery; a prospective study Transfusion Feb 2003 Impact of allogenic packed red blood cell transfusion on nosocomial infection rates in the critically ill patient Crit Care Med 2002 Vol 30 #10 Transfusion Practice and Blood Stream Infections in Critically Ill Patients Chest 2005:127 Blood transfusions correlate with infections in trauma patients in a dose-dependant manner Am Surg 2002:68

  14. 838 ICU patients randomi zed into one of the following strategies: • Restrictive (transfusion for Hgb < 7g/dl) • Liberal (transfusion for Hgb < 10 g/dl)

  15. TRICC Trial Results A Multicenter, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial of Transfusion Requirements in Critical Care – Hebert et al New England Journal of Medicine 1999

  16. Blood Transfusion MorbidityStudy of 12,000 CAB patients at Cleveland Clinic Morbidity and mortality risk associated with red blood cell and blood-component transfusion in isolated coronary artery bypass grafting – Koch, et al. ,Critical Care Medicine 2006

  17. Blood Transfusion MorbidityStudy of 12,000 CAB patients at Cleveland Clinic “Transfusion is the single factor most reliably associated with increased postoperative morbid events. Each unit of red cells transfused is associated with incrementally increased risk for adverse outcome.” Morbidity and mortality risk associated with red blood cell and blood-component transfusion in isolated coronary artery bypass grafting – Koch, et al. ,Critical Care Medicine 2006

  18. How low can we go?

  19. 10/30 Rule* First proposed in 1942 and based on studies that defined “peak” oxygen delivery in animals *Keep Hgb at 10gm and Hct at 30%

  20. 10/30 Rule* *Keep Hgb at 10gm and Hct at 30%

  21. How low can we go? • In animal studies, ECG ST segment changes are observed once Hgb falls below 5 g/dL • Both human and animal studies have demonstrated that Hgb’s < 3 g/dL are “maximally life-threatening.” Time course and etiology of death in patients with severe anemia Transfusion Vol 49 July 2009

  22. Is Fresh Blood better than Old Blood ?

  23. 6,000 patients – 20,000 units of blood Compared “newer blood” (14 days or less of storage to “older blood” (>14 days of storage)

  24. HIGHER RATES OF: • Mortality • Prolonged ventilation • Renal Failure • Sepsis Duration of Red-Cell Storage and Complications after Cardiac Surgery The New England Journal of Medicine 2008

  25. FDA Requirements Hemolysis must be no greater than 1% at the end of storage, and RBC recovery rates must be greater than 75% one day after transfusion Does the storage duration of blood products affect outcomes in critically ill patients Spinella et al, Transfusion August 2011

  26. Altered parameters in Stored RBC Biochemical Metabolic Biomechanical Oxidative SNO-Hb↓ RBC Storage Lesions Tatsuro Yoshida PhD Presentation to AABB

  27. Byproducts of Stored RBC’s Released heme and iron from ruptured cells Shed microvesicles Loss of lipid and protein products from damaged RBC’s Activated RBC adhesins Properties of stored red blood cells: understanding immune and vascular reactivity Spinella et.al Transfusion 2011

  28. FDA Requirements Membrane fragments (lipids) shed from almost all cell types. They have been implicated in immune suppression.

  29. Byproducts of Stored RBC’s “All of these materials and activities are normal parts of the RBC life cycle, but they are concentrated in space and time by the RBC storage and transfusion process.” Properties of stored red blood cells: understanding immune and vascular reactivity Spinella et.al Transfusion 2011

  30. “TWO-INSULT” Model Insult # 1 = Patient’s underlying inflammatory condition which “primes” the patient’s immune cells Insult # 2 = Full-on inflammatory activation triggered by a potential second insult, such as an allogeneic blood transfusion Properties of stored red blood cells: understanding immune and vascular reactivity Spinella et.al Transfusion 2011

  31. Age of Blood Evaluation (ABLE) Trial Canadian multicenter, randomized, controlled trial in the resuscitation of critically ill patients Opened in 2008 – Anticipated end 2013 2,500 patients Outcome measurements = 90 day mortality, MODS, infections, length of stay,

  32. Red Cell Storage Duration Study (RECESS) NHLBI multicenter, randomized, controlled trial in cardiac surgery patients. Comparing blood stored <10 and >21 days. Opened in 2010 – Anticipated end 2013 1,800 patients Outcome measurements = 90 day mortality, MODS, major cardiac events, ventilation time, renal function, liver function.

  33. Age of Blood in Children in Pediatric Intensive Care Units (ABC - PICU) Randomizing children to either a) blood less than 7 days old, or b) standard – issue RBC’s. Opened in 2010 – Anticipated end 2013 1,500 patients Outcome measurements = 28 day MODS, major cardiac events, ventilation time, renal function, liver function.

  34. So what do we do with all of this?

  35. Byproducts of Stored RBC’s Released heme and iron from ruptured cells Shed microvesicles Loss of lipid and protein products from damaged RBC’s Activated RBC adhesins Properties of stored red blood cells: understanding immune and vascular reactivity Spinella et.al Transfusion 2011

  36. Transfusion. 2005 Aug;45(8):1295-301. Extracellular potassium concentrations in red blood cell suspensions after irradiation and washing. Weiskopf RB, Schnapp S, Rouine-Rapp K, Bostrom A, Toy P. J Trauma. 2006 Apr;60(4):851-8. Pulmonary endothelial permeability is increased by fluid from packed red blood cell units but not by fluid from clinically-available washed units. Rao RS, Howard CA, Teague TK. Transfus Apher Sci. 2008 Apr;38(2):141-7. Epub 2008 Mar 17. Stored packed red blood cells contain a procoagulant phospholipid reducible by leukodepletion filters and washing. Cardo LJ, Hmel P, Wilder D. Transfus Med. 2007 Apr;17(2):89-95. Processing of stored packed red blood cells using autotransfusion devices decreases potassium and microaggregates: a prospective, randomized, single-blinded in vitro study. Westphal-Varghese B, Erren M, Westphal M, Van Aken H, Ertmer C, Lange M, Booke M.

  37. Anesth Analg. 2002 Aug;95(2):324-5, table of contents. Intraoperative washing of long-stored packed red blood cells by using an autotransfusion device prevents hyperkalemia. Knichwitz G, Zahl M, Van Aken H, Semjonow A, Booke M. ASAIO J. 2007 Nov-Dec;53(6):680-3. The effect of preprocessing stored red blood cells on neonates undergoing corrective cardiac surgery. Liu J, Ji B, Feng Z, Zhao J, Li C, Li B, Long C. “Washing is associated with the loss of 10% to 20% of the red cells.” Blood Transfusion Therapy – A Physicians Handbook AABB 2005

  38. REGULATORY ISSUES 1 Write a procedure 2. Get it signed by your doctors 3. Pick a QC marker 4. Measure (validate) what you are doing 5. Record your results.

  39. So what does this mean?

  40. So what does this mean? • Understand that transfusions may lead to worse outcomes.

  41. So what does this mean? • Understand that transfusions may lead to worse outcomes. • It is reasonable to infer that older stored blood may lead to worse outcomes!

  42. So what does this mean? • Understand that transfusions may lead to worse outcomes. • It is reasonable to infer that older stored blood may lead to worse outcomes! • Washing older stored blood may reduce morbidity.

More Related