• Pediatr Crit Care Me · Nov 2016

    Hematocrit Levels, Blood Testing, and Blood Transfusion in Infants After Heart Surgery.

    • Claudia Delgado-Corcoran, Katherine H Wolpert, Kathryn Lucas, Stephanie Bodily, Angela P Presson, and Susan L Bratton.
    • 1Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT.2Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Primary Children's Hospital, Intermountain Health Care, Salt Lake City, UT.
    • Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2016 Nov 1; 17 (11): 1055-1063.

    ObjectiveTo determine whether judicious blood testing impacts timing or amount of packed RBC transfusions in infants after heart surgery.DesignA retrospective study comparing before and after initiation of a quality improvement process.SettingA university-affiliated cardiac ICU at a tertiary care children's hospital.PatientsInfants less than 1 year old with Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery category 4, 5, 6, or d-transposition of great arteries (Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery 3) consecutively treated during 2010 through 2013.InterventionA quality improvement process implemented in 2011 to decrease routine laboratory testing after surgery.Measurements And Main ResultsFifty-two infants preintervention and 214 postintervention had similar age, weight, proportion of cyanotic lesions, and surgical complexity. Infants with single versus biventricular physiology were compared separately. The number of laboratory tests per patient adjusted for cardiac ICU length of stay (laboratory tests/patient/day) was significantly lower in postintervention populations for single and biventricular groups (9 vs 15 and 10 vs 15, respectively; p < 0.001). The proportion of single ventricle patients transfused post- and preintervention was not statistically different (72% vs 90%; p = 0.130). Transfusion in the biventricular groups was the same over time (65% vs 65%). Time to first transfusion was significantly longer in the postintervention single ventricle group (4 vs 1 d; p < 0.001), and was not statistically different in the biventricular patients (4 vs 7 d; p = 0.058). The median hematocrit level at first transfusion was significantly lower (37% vs 40%; p = 0.004) postintervention in the cyanotic population, but did not differ in the biventricular group (31% vs 31%; p = 0.840).ConclusionIn infants after heart surgery, blood testing targeted to individual needs significantly decreased the number of blood tests, but did not significantly decrease postoperative blood transfusion.

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