Blood Transfusion Clinical Trial
The aim of this study is to compare retrograde autologous priming (RAP) of the bypass circuit to cell salvage (CS) as part of blood conservation strategies in adult cardiac surgery. It hypothesizes that RAP is at least as effective as cell salvage in terms of blood conservation but at the same time more cost effective.
Cardiac surgery is a major blood consumer. Current evidence shows there is no benefit from
transfusion for haematocrits as low as 21% and the risk of death within 30 days of surgery
is almost 6 times higher for patients who receive blood. In addition, transfused patients
are more likely to experience increased infections and ischaemic complications like
myocardial infarction, stroke and renal compromise. While it is agreed to avoid blood
transfusion when feasible, there is no current consensus on the best strategy to maintain an
acceptable haemocrit and minimise the need for allogenic blood transfusion. Two of the many
strategies that have been employed are Retrograde Autologous Prime (RAP) of the bypass
circuit and cell salvage (CS) with reinfusion of shed blood.
This study is a prospective, randomised controlled trial with 240 patients undergoing a
single procedure adult cardiac surgery that will be randomised to either full crystalloid
prime volume or RAP, with or without cell salvage. There will be four study arms;
1. RAP alone
2. Cell Salvage alone
3. RAP plus cell salvage
4. Control group
Results will follow analyse of the data using a logistic regression using a design matric
with blood transfused as a key explanatory variable with scope to add in patient
covariables. It is expected that date will be analysed after 100 patients and if
significance is achieved then the study can be terminated.
The study will aim to identify those patients that receive a blood transfusion intra or
post-operatively. Symptomatology from anaemia is subjective and hard to measure. The studies
linking transfusion to cardiac surgery outcomes are retrospective; despite careful risk
adjustment, it is possible that these associations reflect a tendency amongst clinicians to
transfuse the most critically ill patients or miss another important confounder.
In 2001, Spiess referred to current transfusion practice as a 'silent epidemic'. His
description is still accurate. In 2006, almost half of all patients undergoing coronary
artery bypass grafting in the united states received blood transfusion and the probability
of receiving blood is greater when procedures are more complex. Although the infectious risk
of blood transfusion have been successfully minimised the weight of evidence increasingly
suggests that transfusing less in stable patients could prevent a significant amount of
morbidity and mortality. This study will help guide management in those in whom transfusion
is avoidable.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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