Our success was achieved through hospital-wide physician buy-in toward a restrictive transfusion approach. We hope to encourage others to consider PBM for improved patient outcomes and blood conservation.
and Introduction AbstractBlood transfusions are common in the hospital setting. Despite the large commitment of resources to the delivery of blood components, many clinicians have only a vague understanding of the complexities associated with blood management and transfusion therapy. The purpose of this primer is to broaden the awareness of health care practitioners in terms of the risks versus benefits of blood transfusions, their economics, and alternative treatments. By developing and implementing comprehensive blood management programs, hospitals can promote safe and clinically effective blood utilization practices. The cornerstones of blood management programs are the implementation of evidence-based transfusion guidelines to reduce variability in transfusion practice, and the employment of multidisciplinary teams to study, implement, and monitor local blood management strategies. Pharmacists can play a key role in blood management programs by providing technical expertise as well as oversight and monitoring of pharmaceutical agents used to reduce the need for allogeneic blood.
The use of high ratios of red blood cells to platelets and plasma in trauma resuscitation protocols is quickly gaining favor in civilian trauma centers. The use of higher ratios of coagulation factors to red blood cells has been shown to improve outcomes in both military and civilian centers, but does the evidence support the use of a 1:1:1 ratio, as has been suggested? There is growing evidence that the use of such high ratios may be excessive and potentially harmful, and there has not been enough emphasis on the other components of evidence-based "damage control" resuscitation.Transfusion therapy has come full cycle in Iraq and Afghanistan as fresh whole blood use has again found a place in the resuscitation of military casualties. The use of equal ratios of packed red blood cells, plasma, and platelets (so called 1:1:1 therapy) to effectively reconstitute whole blood is gaining ground in civilian trauma centers to attempt to replicate the approach of military trauma teams. Although this is an exciting and potential livesaving therapy, have we considered the "collateral damage" of these trauma resuscitation protocols and does the current evidence support this approach? A cautionary note to begin the discussion was best phrased by Dr. Stephen Cohen: "As mortality rates range from one-third to one-half of these massively transfused individuals, heroic new measures are aggressively sought after and easily embraced." 1
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