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Blood Products in Critically ill Children

Blood Products in Critically ill Children. Shamiel Salie Paediatric Intensive Care Unit Red Cross Children’s Hospital, University of Cape Town. 1818 - Extracted 4 ounces of blood from the arm of the patient’s husband with a syringe and

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Blood Products in Critically ill Children

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  1. Blood Products in Critically ill Children Shamiel Salie Paediatric Intensive Care Unit Red Cross Children’s Hospital, University of Cape Town

  2. 1818 - Extracted 4 ounces of blood from the arm of the patient’s husband with a syringe and successfully transfused it

  3. Anaemia in critically ill children • Causes • Chronic anaemia • Overt and occult blood loss • Bone marrow suppression from diseases/treatment • Inadequate erythropoietin response to anaemia

  4. Red Blood Cell Transfusions • For decades considered to be a low risk with obvious benefits • 10/30 rule • Restrictive use of blood since the 1980’s

  5. What actually happens in PICU? • 50% of children in PICU’s transfused Bateman: Am J RespCrit Care Med 2008 • Large variability in clinical practise • Bedside observational studies Gauvin 2000 & Armano 2005 • transfusion threshold ranges from 7 - 11 g/dl • 30 North American PICU’s • Pretransfusion Hb 9.7 g/dl Bateman: Am J RespCrit Care Med 2008

  6. Physiological benefits of RBC transfusions • Tissue hypoxia may be due to low Hb concentration, cardiac output or SaO2 • Oxygen delivery exceeds requirements • Adaptive processes as oxygen delivery decreases with anaemia • Increased oxygen extraction • Increased heart rate and stroke volume • Preferential perfusion of head and heart at the expense of splanchnic perfusion

  7. Altered physiological adaptation to low Hb in critically ill children • Increased metabolic rate in SIRS increases oxygen consumption and lowers reserves • Impaired LV function and vascular tone restricts oxygen delivery and blood redistribution • Infants have high resting heart rates, which limits the ability to increase cardiac output

  8. Microcirculatory effects of transfused RBC • Global increase in oxygen delivery with potentially decreased microcirculatory flow • Increased blood viscousity • Cytokines my cause vasoconstriction • Low levels of 2,3 DPG shifts curve left, impeding oxygen availability • Decreased RBC membrane deformability • Free Hb may bind NO causing vasoconstriction

  9. Immunologic effects of RBC transfusion • Some evidence that it may cause • Immune suppression by altering lymphocyte reactivity • Pro inflammatory: cytokines in unfiltered rbc’s might trigger SIRS or multi organ failure

  10. When should critically ill children be transfused?

  11. 637 critically ill children • Equivalence of restrictive strategy (Hb<7) and • liberal strategy (Hb <9.5) • No difference in MODS, death, icu stay and sepsis • 44% reduction in blood transfusions • 50% of study children transfused

  12. 838 critically ill adults • Restrictive strategy (Hb<7) and liberal strategy (Hb <9) • Restrictive group had 54% fewer rbc units • Decrease mortality in adults who were less sick • Possible exceptions: unstable angina and MI’s

  13. 1269 Kenyan children hospitalized for malaria English, Lancet 2002 • RBC transfusion decreased mortality in severe anaemia, <4g/dl or if Hb < 5g/dl and dyspnoeic - some benefits to keep Hb > 5 in hospitalized children

  14. Haemodynamically unstable children: Hb > 10 • De Oliveira et al (Intens. Care Med. 2008) • children with severe sepsis • significant reduction in 28 day mortality (11% vs 39%, p=0.002) and new organ failure • targeting SVC sats > 70% using fluids, inotropes and blood transfusions keeping Hb > 10g/dl • Similar outcomes in adults using goal directed therapy Rivers et al, NEJM 2001 • Children with severe congenital heart disease and traumatic brain injuries might need higher Hb’s

  15. Transfusion related acute lung injury (TRALI) • Aetiology poorly understood • Diagnostic criteria • Acute lung injury occurring within 6 hours of a transfusion • No signs of fluid overload • Bilateral lung infiltrates on cxr • Usually resolves within 48 hours

  16. Leukocyte reduced RBC’s • Reduces leukocytes by up to 99% • reduces the number of cell associated viruses: cmv, herpes and ebv • May reduce transmission of prions and parasites and incidence of TRALI

  17. Fresh Frozen Plasma • Treatment of DIC and replacement of clotting factor • Effectiveness judged by cessation of bleeding. • aPTT and INR poor predictor of bleeding Gajic: Crit Care Med 206 • Not recommended as a volume expander

  18. Platelets • Thrombocytopenia and qualitative platelet defects impairs ability to form platelet plugs • Risk of massive bleeding when platelet count < 10 and IVH when platelets <1 • No scientific basis for keeping platelets > 20

  19. Cryoprecipitate • Rapid increase in fibrinogen levels in patients with DIC and active bleeding

  20. Meta-analyses of 24 studies, 1419 patients • 6% increase in mortality or ‘1 death for every 17 patients given albumen’

  21. Meta-analysis of 55 trials, 3504 patients • No difference in mortality

  22. Nearly 7000 patients • No significant difference in mortality • Similar rates of secondary outcomes • Survival time, organ dysfunction, duration of mechanical ventilation, length of icu and hospital stay • Albumin to saline ratio 1: 1.4

  23. Conclusions • Stable critically ill children can support an Hb > 7 • Maintain Hb > 10 in haemodynamically unstable children, those with significant cardiovascular disease and traumatic brain injuries

  24. Conclusions • Advantages to using leukocyte reduced blood • Platelet transfusion thresholds not evidence based • Prophylactic use of FFP is controversial

  25. Questions

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