• J. Matern. Fetal. Neonatal. Med. · Nov 2014

    Prediction of postpartum blood transfusion--risk factors and recurrence.

    • Anne J Wikkelsø, Sofie Hjortøe, Thomas A Gerds, Ann M Møller, and Jens Langhoff-Roos.
    • Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Herlev Hospital , Herlev , Denmark .
    • J. Matern. Fetal. Neonatal. Med. 2014 Nov 1; 27 (16): 1661-7.

    ObjectiveThe aim was to find clinically useful risk factors for postpartum transfusion and to assess the joint predictive value in a population of women with a first and second delivery.MethodsAll Danish women with a first and second delivery from January 2001 to September 2009 who gave birth in a hospital that reported transfusion of red blood cells to a national database: A total of 96 545 women were included.ResultsRetained placental tissue explained more than all other risk factors in vaginal deliveries. Retained placental tissue at first delivery was associated with postpartum transfusion at a second vaginal delivery, and may also be used as an early predictor in parallel with a history of either placental abruption, postpartum transfusion or caesarean delivery. The positive predictive values of having more than one risk factor was low (2.2%-2.7%).ConclusionsPrediction of postpartum transfusion is difficult. Retained placental tissue is the strongest predictor of postpartum blood transfusion in vaginal deliveries. Retained placental tissue is usually diagnosed for the first time when the bleeding starts, which limits the clinical value of prediction. We need tools for an early diagnosis of retained placenta to intervene early before transfusion is needed.

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