医学
重症监护
病危
急诊医学
医学诊断
队列研究
前瞻性队列研究
队列
输血
重症监护医学
观察研究
内科学
病理
作者
Thiago M. Oliveira,Michael E. Billington,Raghu R. Seethala,Peter C. Hou,Reza Askari,Imoigele P. Aisiku
摘要
This study describes the prevalence of blood transfusion protocols in ICUs caring for neurologically vs. non-neurologically injured patients across a sample of US ICUs. This prospective, observational multi-center cohort study is a subgroup analysis of the USCIITG—CIOS, comprising 69 ICUs across the US (25 medical, 24 surgical, 20 mixed ICUs). Sixty-four ICUs were in teaching hospitals. A total of 6179 patients were enrolled, with 1266 (20.4%) having central nervous system (CNS) primary diagnoses. We evaluated whether CNS versus non-CNS diagnosis was associated with care in ICUs with restrictive transfusion protocols (RTPs) or massive transfusion protocols (MTPs) and whether CNS versus non-CNS diagnosis was associated with receiving blood products or colloids during the initial 24 h of care. Protocol utilization in CNS vs. non-CNS patients was as follows: RTPs—36.9% vs. 42.9% (p < 0.001); MTPs—48.3% vs. 47.4% (p = 0.57). Blood product transfusions in the first 24 h of ICU care (comparing CNS vs. non-CNS patients) were as follows: packed red blood cells—4.3% vs. 14.6% (p < 0.001); fresh frozen plasma—2.9% vs. 5.1% (p < 0.001); colloid blood products—3.2% vs. 9.2% (p < 0.001). In this cohort, we found differences in ICU utilization of RTPs, but not MTPs, when comparing where critically ill patients with neurologic versus non-neurologic primary diagnoses received ICU care.
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