Clinical Guidelines For Blood Conservation During Cardiac Procedures Developed
Malorie Janis
VCU Communications and Public Relations
(804) 827-0889
mgjanis@vcu.edu
5/16/2007
Streaming video (Windows Media format) of interview with Dr. Bruce Spiess, VCU School of Medicine:
- Video Clip 1:"You can safely do heart surgery and
perhaps improve outcomes with blood conserving techniques."
- Video Clip 2:"We
believe we represent a model for how blood conserving surgery should be done
throughout the world."
A team of medical experts led
by a Virginia Commonwealth University anesthesiologist and a thoracic surgeon
from the University of Kentucky has established a set of clinical guidelines to
help physicians decrease the need for blood transfusions in high-risk patients
during cardiac operations.
The team, led by Bruce
Spiess, M.D., professor in the Department of Anesthesiology at the VCU School
of Medicine and director of VCURES Shock Research Center, and Victor A. Ferraris, M.D., chief of the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery at the University of Kentucky's Albert B. Chandler Hospital, developed the guidelines,
"Perioperative Blood Transfusion and Blood Conservation in Cardiac Surgery." It
appears as a standalone supplement to the May 2007 issue of the The Annals of Thoracic Surgery.
"Blood must be
viewed as a scarce resource that carries risks and benefits," said Spiess.
"This is a huge event for medicine. If these guidelines are adopted by a
majority of cardiovascular centers in the world, we can decrease the amount of
blood transfusions, blood usage and cost and blood shortages would be less
frequent and not occur to such a degree.
"There is very
strong evidence that patients who receive more blood have more post operative
infection, have more renal failure and have more lung dysfunction," he said.
According to
the report, about 15 to 20 percent of patients undergoing cardiac procedures
consume more than 80 percent of the blood products transfused at operation.
Ferraris agreed
with the great significance of the guidelines.
"The blood
conservation practice guidelines generated under the auspices of the Society of
Thoracic Surgeons represents a landmark undertaking," he said. "This work
should serve as a template for individual cardiothoracic surgeons and for
institutions as they manage valuable and scarce blood component resources."
In the
analysis, the committees from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, chaired by
Ferraris, and the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists' Task Force on
Blood Transfusion, chaired by Spiess, collaborated over a period of four years
in determining the evidence-based series of recommendation for practice.
They reviewed
all available published evidence related to blood conservation during cardiac
operations and identified preoperative and perioperative interventions that are
likely to reduce bleeding and postoperative blood transfusion.
The guidelines
suggest that institution-specific protocols should screen for high-risk
patients, as blood conservation interventions are likely to be most productive
for this high-risk subset.
Some
evidence-based blood conservation techniques include drugs that increase
preoperative blood volume or decrease postoperative bleeding; devices that
conserve blood; and interventions that protect the patient's own blood from the
stress of operation.
"We
already do most or all of these things here at the VCU Medical Center and have led
the nation in implementing an entire program," said Spiess. "We have not only
been successful in cardiac surgery but also now have a full program for the
whole hospital."
The guidelines
are available online at http://ats.ctsnetjournals.org/cgi/content/full/83/5_Supplement/S27.
- About VCU and the VCU Medical Center
Virginia Commonwealth University is a major, urban public research university with national and international rankings in sponsored research. Located on two downtown campuses in Richmond, VCU enrolls more than 32,000 students in 211 certificate and degree programs in the arts, sciences and humanities. Sixty-nine of the programs are unique in Virginia, many of them crossing the disciplines of VCU’s 13 schools and one college. MCV Hospitals and the health sciences schools of Virginia Commonwealth University compose the VCU Medical Center, one of the nation’s leading academic medical centers. For more, see www.vcu.edu.