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J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Feb 2024
What Drives Variability in Postoperative Cardiac Surgery Transfusion Rates?
- Carrinton Mauney, Eric Etchill, Amanda Rea, Edwin FonnerCliffordCMaryland Cardiac Surgery Quality Initiative, Baltimore, Md., Glenn Whitman, and Rawn Salenger.
- Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md.
- J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2024 Feb 7.
ObjectiveWide interhospital variation exists in cardiac surgical postoperative transfusion rates. We aimed to compare transfusion rates at 2 hospitals and identify the institutional practice factors, unrelated to patient or operative characteristics, associated with postoperative transfusion rates.MethodsRecords for adult patients undergoing routine cardiac surgery at 2 hospitals (H and L) from February 2020 to August 2022 were analyzed. Patient and operative characteristics, preoperative and intensive care unit hemoglobin values, and postoperative transfusion rates were compared. Transfusion indication was recorded prospectively. Propensity matching was completed to assess comparability of patient populations.ResultsAfter propensity matching patients at H and L on age, procedure type, predicted morbidity or mortality, crossclamp time, preoperative hypertension, preoperative heart failure, and preoperative stroke, 2111 patients remained, with similar characteristics except hypertension. Matched results showed no significant differences in mortality, reoperation, or other major outcomes. Hospital H transfused 36% of patients (mean postoperative hemoglobin [Hb] 10.5) with 1483 units of packed red blood cells whereas hospital L transfused 12% of patients (mean postoperative Hb 9.4) with 198 units of packed red blood cells (P < .001). For all patients with a Hb >7.5, hospital H versus L transfused 27% versus 0.9% (P < .001). Hospital L's sole transfusion indication for pretransfusion hemoglobin trigger >7.5 was bleeding versus hospital H, which had multiple indications. When Hb concentration alone was the indication for transfusion, the threshold at hospital H was <7.5 g/dL versus <6 g/dL at hospital L.ConclusionsVariation in transfusion rates between hospitals H and L resulted from strict adherence at hospital L to a transfusion trigger of <6 g/dL with narrow indications for transfusions above that Hb concentration.Copyright © 2024 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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