Anemia has a negative impact on cardiac surgery outcomes. Anemia has been linked to various postoperative complications, including death, for all types of heart surgery.
Anemia has a negative impact on cardiac surgery outcomes, say researchers. Anemia has been linked to various postoperative complications, including death, for all types of heart surgery. - First study to link anemia to poor outcomes for all types of heart surgery.
- Patients with severe anemia have double the mortality of those without anemia.
- Patients and family doctors advised to rectify anemic status before heart surgery.
Researchers from Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico (IRCCS) Policlinico San Donato in Milan, Italy, compared recorded medical outcomes for 401 adult cardiac surgery patients with severe anemia (hematocrit <30%) to 401 matched non-severely anemic heart surgery patients admitted to IRCCS between 2000 and 2011. They found that the patients with severe anemia had nearly double the operative mortality rate of patients who did not have severe anemia and were at increased risk for stroke, prolonged mechanical ventilation, and longer stays in the intensive care unit. Further investigation found similar results in patients with moderate anemia.
"Unlike other recognized risk factors for cardiac surgery patients, such as advanced age and poor kidney function, anemia can be corrected with iron supplementation and medications that stimulate red blood cell production," said lead author Marco Ranucci, MD. "Unfortunately, to correct anemia we need two to three weeks before the operation, which may be too long for many patients to wait."
Iron-deficiency anemia may result from blood loss, iron-poor diet, or insufficient iron absorption from food. Consequently, older adults are at risk for this common, easily treated anemia. Currently, preoperative anemia is not considered a risk factor for survival following heart surgery by the existing risk scores, although anemia''s role had previously been investigated in outcomes for coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery.
"Until it can be clearly demonstrated that correcting anemia improves outcomes, I think that working to correct and preserve the natural hemoglobin in a patient''s blood prior to surgery is a viable and safe option," Dr. Ranucci said.
Anemia should be identified in advance of heart surgery
In an invited commentary in the same issue, Jeremiah R. Brown, PhD, MS, an Assistant Professor at The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice at the Geisel School of Medicine in Hanover, NH, wrote that the Ranucci paper presents a convincing case for adding severe anemia to current cardiac surgery preoperative mortality models and called on cardiothoracic societies in the US and Europe to evaluate existing models.
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He added that certain diagnostic procedures could be planned well ahead of elective surgeries, such as CABG surgery, to help identify anemia and provide time to treat it. "This extra time would allow surgeons to review the results and determine a strategic plan," said Dr. Brown.
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