• Transfusion · Jan 1986

    Why is fresh-frozen plasma transfused?

    • A J Snyder, J L Gottschall, and J E Menitove.
    • Transfusion. 1986 Jan 1; 26 (1): 107-12.

    AbstractA three-part study to determine the reasons for fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) transfusions at hospitals in southeastern Wisconsin was conducted. During a 1-month period, hospital transfusion services reported that patients undergoing open-heart surgery received 42 percent, medical patients 26 percent, noncardiac surgery patients 23 percent, neonatal patients 1 percent, and other patients 7 percent of the FFP transfused. In the second phase of the study, the records of 102 patients receiving FFP during a 1-month period at two teaching hospitals were reviewed. Justification for the FFP transfusion was provided in the hospital chart for only 11 percent of the transfusion episodes, although abnormal results of coagulation studies or signs of hypovolemia were recorded for an additional 51 percent. Frequently, FFP and red cell (RBC) transfusions were given during the same transfusion episode. In the third phase of the study, clinicians completed a questionnaire specifying their "trigger" for prescribing FFP: bleeding (43% of episodes), abnormal coagulation studies (26%), signs/symptoms of hypovolemia (16%), and "other" (15%). They judged that the FFP transfusion was effective in 47 percent of transfusion episodes and ineffective in only 6 percent. These findings indicate that FFP is used mainly as a source of coagulation factor replacement in hospitals served by The Blood Center of Southeastern Wisconsin, that justification for FFP use rarely is provided in patient records, that both FFP and RBCs are frequently transfused together, and that clinicians believe FFP is beneficial for their patients. Educational efforts addressing appropriate use of FFP should be initiated.

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