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Patients who receive red blood cell (RBC) transfusions before, during, or immediately after surgery may have an increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), a new study suggests.
In this retrospective study, transfusion recipients had twice the risk of VTE as patients who did not receive RBC transfusions during the perioperative period.
Investigators say these findings require validation, but they suggest a need for physicians to consider non-transfusion alternatives to treat anemia in patients undergoing surgery.
“These findings reinforce the importance of following rigorous perioperative patient blood management practices for transfusions,” said Ruchika Goel, MD, of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, New York.
Dr Goel and her colleagues reported their findings in JAMA Surgery.
The investigators analyzed data on 750,937 patients who underwent surgery in 2014. In all, 6.3% (n=47,410) of patients received at least one RBC transfusion.
Within 30 days of surgery, 0.8% (n=6309) of all patients had a VTE. This included 0.6% (n=4336) with deep vein thrombosis (DVT), 0.3% (n=2514) with pulmonary embolism (PE), and 0.1% (n=541) with DVT and PE.
Analyses showed that patients who received RBC transfusions were twice as likely to develop VTE as those who did not receive transfusions (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]=2.1). This was true for both DVT (aOR=2.2) and PE (aOR=1.9).
“We also saw this risk across different surgical disciplines, ranging from neurosurgery to cardiac surgery,” said study author Aaron Tobian, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.
Furthermore, VTE risk increased with the number of RBC transfusions a patient received. The aORs were 2.1 for 1 transfusion, 3.1 for 2 transfusions, and 4.5 for 3 or more transfusions (compared to patients who did not receive any transfusions).
“This retrospective study demonstrates that there may be additional risks to blood transfusion that are not generally recognized in the community,” Dr Tobian said. “While additional research is needed to confirm these results, the findings reinforce the need to limit blood transfusions to only when necessary.”
Patients who receive red blood cell (RBC) transfusions before, during, or immediately after surgery may have an increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), a new study suggests.
In this retrospective study, transfusion recipients had twice the risk of VTE as patients who did not receive RBC transfusions during the perioperative period.
Investigators say these findings require validation, but they suggest a need for physicians to consider non-transfusion alternatives to treat anemia in patients undergoing surgery.
“These findings reinforce the importance of following rigorous perioperative patient blood management practices for transfusions,” said Ruchika Goel, MD, of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, New York.
Dr Goel and her colleagues reported their findings in JAMA Surgery.
The investigators analyzed data on 750,937 patients who underwent surgery in 2014. In all, 6.3% (n=47,410) of patients received at least one RBC transfusion.
Within 30 days of surgery, 0.8% (n=6309) of all patients had a VTE. This included 0.6% (n=4336) with deep vein thrombosis (DVT), 0.3% (n=2514) with pulmonary embolism (PE), and 0.1% (n=541) with DVT and PE.
Analyses showed that patients who received RBC transfusions were twice as likely to develop VTE as those who did not receive transfusions (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]=2.1). This was true for both DVT (aOR=2.2) and PE (aOR=1.9).
“We also saw this risk across different surgical disciplines, ranging from neurosurgery to cardiac surgery,” said study author Aaron Tobian, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.
Furthermore, VTE risk increased with the number of RBC transfusions a patient received. The aORs were 2.1 for 1 transfusion, 3.1 for 2 transfusions, and 4.5 for 3 or more transfusions (compared to patients who did not receive any transfusions).
“This retrospective study demonstrates that there may be additional risks to blood transfusion that are not generally recognized in the community,” Dr Tobian said. “While additional research is needed to confirm these results, the findings reinforce the need to limit blood transfusions to only when necessary.”
Patients who receive red blood cell (RBC) transfusions before, during, or immediately after surgery may have an increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), a new study suggests.
In this retrospective study, transfusion recipients had twice the risk of VTE as patients who did not receive RBC transfusions during the perioperative period.
Investigators say these findings require validation, but they suggest a need for physicians to consider non-transfusion alternatives to treat anemia in patients undergoing surgery.
“These findings reinforce the importance of following rigorous perioperative patient blood management practices for transfusions,” said Ruchika Goel, MD, of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, New York.
Dr Goel and her colleagues reported their findings in JAMA Surgery.
The investigators analyzed data on 750,937 patients who underwent surgery in 2014. In all, 6.3% (n=47,410) of patients received at least one RBC transfusion.
Within 30 days of surgery, 0.8% (n=6309) of all patients had a VTE. This included 0.6% (n=4336) with deep vein thrombosis (DVT), 0.3% (n=2514) with pulmonary embolism (PE), and 0.1% (n=541) with DVT and PE.
Analyses showed that patients who received RBC transfusions were twice as likely to develop VTE as those who did not receive transfusions (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]=2.1). This was true for both DVT (aOR=2.2) and PE (aOR=1.9).
“We also saw this risk across different surgical disciplines, ranging from neurosurgery to cardiac surgery,” said study author Aaron Tobian, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.
Furthermore, VTE risk increased with the number of RBC transfusions a patient received. The aORs were 2.1 for 1 transfusion, 3.1 for 2 transfusions, and 4.5 for 3 or more transfusions (compared to patients who did not receive any transfusions).
“This retrospective study demonstrates that there may be additional risks to blood transfusion that are not generally recognized in the community,” Dr Tobian said. “While additional research is needed to confirm these results, the findings reinforce the need to limit blood transfusions to only when necessary.”