Risk and Safety Perceptions Contribute to Transfusion Decisions in Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting.
Publication/Presentation Date
12-1-2021
Abstract
Variability persists in intraoperative red blood cell (RBC) transfusion rates, despite evidence supporting associated adverse sequelae. We evaluated whether beliefs concerning transfusion risk and safety are independently associated with the inclination to transfuse. We surveyed intraoperative transfusion decision-makers from 33 cardiac surgery programs in Michigan. The primary outcome was a provider's reported inclination to transfuse (via a six-point Likert Scale) averaged across 10 clinical vignettes based on Class IIA or IIB blood management guideline recommendations. Survey questions assessed hematocrit threshold for transfusion ("hematocrit trigger"), demographic and practice characteristics, years and case-volume of practice, knowledge of transfusion guidelines, and provider attitude regarding perceived risk and safety of blood transfusions. Linear regression models were used to estimate the effect of these variables on transfusion inclination. Mixed effect models were used to quantify the variation attributed to provider specialties and hematocrit triggers. The mean inclination to transfuse was 3.2 (might NOT transfuse) on the survey Likert scale (SD: .86) across vignettes among 202/413 (48.9%) returned surveys. Hematocrit triggers ranged from 15% to 30% (average: 20.4%; SE: .18%). The inclination to transfuse in situations with weak-to-moderate evidence for supporting transfusion was associated with a provider's hematocrit trigger (
Volume
53
Issue
4
First Page
270
Last Page
278
ISSN
0022-1058
Published In/Presented At
Bourque, J. L., Strobel, R. J., Loh, J., Zahuranec, D. B., Paone, G., Kramer, R. S., Delucia, A., 3rd, Behr, W. D., Zhang, M., Engoren, M. C., Prager, R. L., Wu, X., Likosky, D. S., & Michigan Society of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeons Quality Collaborative (2021). Risk and Safety Perceptions Contribute to Transfusion Decisions in Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting. The journal of extra-corporeal technology, 53(4), 270–278. https://doi.org/10.1182/ject-2100026
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
34992317
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article