• World journal of surgery · Aug 2012

    Is intravenous iron useful for reducing transfusions in surgically treated colorectal cancer patients?

    • José Carlos Titos-Arcos, Victoriano Soria-Aledo, Andrés Carrillo-Alcaraz, María Ventura-López, Sonsoles Palacios-Muñoz, and Enrique Pellicer-Franco.
    • Pharmacy Service, Morales Meseguer General University Hospital, C/ Marqués de los Vélez, s/n, 30008, Murcia, Spain. jtitos2@hotmail.com
    • World J Surg. 2012 Aug 1; 36 (8): 1893-7.

    BackgroundThe goal of the present study was to determine whether the intravenous administration of iron in the postoperative period of colon cancer surgical patients suffices to reduce the number of transfusions necessary.MethodThe study was designed as a retrospective observational study conducted over a three-year period. A paired case-control design was used to analyze the effect of postoperative iron on patients' blood transfusion needs. Two groups were established (the case group, which received postoperative iron and the control group, which did not) and matched for age (± 3 years), gender, type of operation, tumor stage, and surgical approach. Of 342 patients who underwent operation, 104 paired patients were obtained for inclusion in this study (52 in each group). A second analysis was made to assess the effect of intravenous iron on the evolution of hemoglobin between the first postoperative day and hospital discharge in the subgroup of patients with reduction in hemoglobin, in subjects without preoperative or postoperative transfusions. Finally, a total of 71 patients were paired in two groups: 37 and 31 patients in case and control, respectively.ResultsThe mean hemoglobin concentration at discharge for the case group was 10 ± 1.1 g/dl, vs. 10.6 ± 1.2 in the controls (P = 0.012). The number of transfusions in the case group was 3 ± 1.6, vs. 3.3 ± 3 in the control group (P = 0.682). Thus, 28.8 % of the patients in the case group received transfusions, versus 30.8 % of those in the control group (P = 0.830). In the second analysis, the decrease in hemoglobin concentration was 0.88 g/dl and 0.82 g/dl in case and control, respectively.ConclusionsIntravenous iron does not appear to reduce the blood transfusion requirements in the postoperative period of colorectal surgery patients with anemia. We consider that further studies are needed to more clearly define the usefulness of intravenous iron in reducing the transfusion needs in such patients.

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