We assessed the safety and efficacy of Fluosol-DA as a red-cell substitute in acute anemia. Twenty-three surgical patients with blood loss and religious objections to receiving blood transfusions were evaluated. Fifteen moderately anemic patients with a mean hemoglobin level (+/- SE) of 7.2 +/- 0.5 g per deciliter had no evidence of a physiologic need for increased arterial oxygen content and did not receive Fluosol-DA. Eight severely anemic patients with a mean hemoglobin level of 3.0 +/- 0.4 g per deciliter met the criteria of need and received the drug until the physiologic need disappeared or a maximal dose of 40 ml per kilogram of body weight was reached. We observed no adverse reactions to Fluosol-DA. The average peak increment in arterial oxygen content with the drug was only 0.7 +/- 0.1 ml per deciliter. There were no appreciable beneficial effects of Fluosol-DA, perhaps because of the small increase in arterial oxygen content, the brief half-life of the drug (24.3 +/- 4.3 hours), and the limited total dose. Six of the eight patients receiving Fluosol-DA died. One of the survivors received red-cell transfusions against his wishes, under a court order, after his total Fluosol-DA dose. Fourteen of the 15 moderately anemic patients survived. The data in this select group of patients refusing blood products suggest that, after blood loss, Fluosol-DA is unnecessary in moderate anemia and ineffective in severe anemia.
We have previously documented the safety of 1 unit (50 gram) of human polymerized hemoglobin (Poly SFH-P) in healthy volunteers. This report describes the first patient trial to assess the therapeutic benefit of Poly SFH-P in acute blood loss. Thirty-nine patients received 1 (n = 14), 2 (n = 2), 3 (n = 15), or 6 (n = 8) units of Poly SFH-P instead of red cells as part of their blood replacement after trauma and urgent surgery. There were no safety issues related to the infusion of Poly SFH-P. The plasma hemoglobin concentration ([Hb]) after the infusion of 6 units (300 gram) of Poly SFH-P was 4.8 +/- 0.8 g/dL (mean +/- SD). Although the red cell [Hb] fell to 2.9 +/- 1.2 g/dL, the total [Hb] was maintained at 7.5 +/- 1.2 g/dL. Poly SFH-P maintained total [Hb], despite the marked fall in red cell [Hb] due to blood loss. The utilization of O2 (extraction ratio) was 27 +/- 16% from the red cells and 37 +/- 13% from the Poly SFH-P. Twenty-three patients (59%) avoided allogeneic transfusions during the first 24 hours after blood loss. Poly SFH-P effectively loads and unloads O2 and maintains total hemoglobin in lieu of red cells after acute blood loss, thereby reducing allogeneic transfusions. Poly SFH-P seems to be a clinically useful blood substitute.
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