The Time Has Come To Treat Anemia Seriously

Main Category: Blood / Hematology
Also Included In: Public Health
Article Date: 29 Jan 2013 - 0:00 PST

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The Time Has Come To Treat Anemia Seriously

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Up to one-third of patients undergoing surgery in Ontario have a treatable form of anemia but are not optimally treated for it.

A paper published online in the Canadian Journal of Anesthesia says that hospitals that do treat patients with anemia have better outcomes, including fewer blood transfusions and infections and shorter hospital stays.

A common option for management of anemia has been blood transfusion. But blood transfusions are expensive and are associated with higher death and complication rates.

Dr. Gregory Hare, an anesthesiologist at St. Michael's Hospital, reported in the paper that hip and knee replacement patients who had blood transfusions stayed in hospital about two days longer than those who did not have transfusions. The stay was about three days longer for coronary artery bypass graft patients who had transfusions. The risk of infection more than doubled for patients who had transfusions.

Dr. Hare called anemia a "silent killer." Severe anemia can cause low oxygen levels in vital organs and may result in heart attacks, strokes and kidney failure. He said early diagnosis of anemia is important to give doctors sufficient time to treat it before surgery.

For example, 10.4 per cent of knee replacement patients diagnosed with anemia less than seven days before surgery required transfusions, compared to 7.3 per cent diagnosed more than 21 days in advance. He said 41.3 per cent of coronary artery bypass grafts patients needed blood transfusions if diagnosed with anemia less than seven days before surgery, compared with 22.8 per cent diagnosed more than 21 days in advance. "If given time to treat anemia, we can avoid unnecessary transfusions and thereby improve quality of patient care," Dr. Hare said.

St. Michael's is developing a Centre of Excellence for Patient Blood Management, which would be one of the first of its kind in Canada and a global leader in patient care and in training, research and education for health care professionals.

Under patient blood management, physicians might prescribe certain drugs or dietary supplements to raise a patient's hemoglobin level before surgery.

During surgery, doctors may use a variety of state of-the-art technologies and techniques to minimize blood loss, such as minimally invasive surgery, electrocautery (using heat to stop vessels from bleeding), an argon beam coagulator, which coagulates or clots blood to minimize blood loss, or intravenous iron and erythropoietin, which stimulate bone marrow to produce red blood cells.

The number of patients requiring blood transfusions after undergoing knee replacement surgery in Ontario in 2011 was less than half the number in 2002.

2002 was when the provincial government set up the Ontario Transfusion Coordinators (ONTraC), a province-wide blood management program administered by St. Michael's Hospital. The goal of the program is to promote blood conservation and alternatives to transfusions for problems such as anemia, a condition where a person has a reduced number of red blood cells or hemoglobin, the part of the red blood cell that carries oxygen.

ONTraC figures published for the first time show the number of patients requiring blood transfusions after undergoing knee surgery fell from 24.5 per cent in 2002 to 10.1 per cent in 2011. The number requiring transfusions after undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting fell from 60.2 per cent to 25.2 per cent in the same time.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our blood / hematology section for the latest news on this subject.
The research was funded by the Canadian Anesthesiologists’ Society, St. Michael’s Departments of Anesthesia, Laboratory Medcine and Medicine. Dr. Hare has been supported by a Merit Award from the Department of Anesthesia, University of Toronto, with salary support from Johnson and Johnson Medical Companies.
St. Michael's Hospital
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Anemia Prognosis

posted by Tom on 29 Jan 2013 at 8:26 am

The rate of death in those who have their hemoglobins raised to normal with erythropoietin is increased in those with kidney disease and when the hemoglobin is raised by transfusions there is a documented increase in mortality.

"Those who received blood transfusions from donors were five times more likely to die within 100 days of their operation than those who did not"

Hypervolemia , higher hemoglobin , leads to much higher death rate.
"Death rate was almost 55% vs. 0% for those patients who were normovolemic to slightly hypovolemic."

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