Patients exposed to a surgical safety checklist experience better postoperative outcomes, but this could simply reflect wider quality of care in hospitals where checklist use is routine.
Background and Objectives
Platelets for transfusion have a shelf‐life of 7 days, limiting availability and leading to wastage. Cryopreservation at −80°C extends shelf‐life to at least 1 year, but safety and effectiveness are uncertain.
Materials and Methods
This single centre blinded pilot trial enrolled adult cardiac surgery patients who were at high risk of platelet transfusion. If treating clinicians determined platelet transfusion was required, up to three units of either cryopreserved or liquid‐stored platelets intraoperatively or during intensive care unit admission were administered. The primary outcome was protocol safety and feasibility.
Results
Over 13 months, 89 patients were randomized, 23 (25.8%) of whom received a platelet transfusion. There were no differences in median blood loss up to 48 h between study groups, or in the quantities of study platelets or other blood components transfused. The median platelet concentration on the day after surgery was lower in the cryopreserved platelet group (122 × 103/μl vs. 157 × 103/μl, median difference 39.5 ×103/μl, p = 0.03). There were no differences in any of the recorded safety outcomes, and no adverse events were reported on any patient. Multivariable adjustment for imbalances in baseline patient characteristics did not find study group to be a predictor of 24‐h blood loss, red cell transfusion or a composite bleeding outcome.
Conclusion
This pilot randomized controlled trial demonstrated the feasibility of the protocol and adds to accumulating data supporting the safety of this intervention. Given the clear advantage of prolonged shelf‐life, particularly for regional hospitals in New Zealand, a definitive non‐inferiority phase III trial is warranted.
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