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Last Updated: Oct 11, 2012 - 10:22:56 PM
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Red cells count: Study shows pre-op levels affect post-op outcomes

Jun 12, 2007 - 4:00:00 AM
Wu said it was too early to tell if changes in medical care before or during surgeries – such as blood transfusions or iron supplements – could improve outcomes for the elderly with anemia. Right now, Wu and his team are currently studying the impact of different treatment options for the elderly with these low red blood cell counts.

 
[RxPG] PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Men over 65 with even slightly abnormal red blood cell counts – either too low or too high – are at greater risk of post-operative death or car-diac events following a major non-cardiac surgery, according to a new study by researchers at the Providence Veterans Affairs Medical Center and The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.

Elderly patients are at risk for abnormal hematocrit values, or the number of red cells in the blood. These red cell counts are often too low, causing anemia, or too high, a sign of a condition called polycythemia. Elderly people are more prone to both anemia and polycythemia because they’re more likely to have health problems that affect red blood cells, such as kidney disease, gastrointestinal bleeding, malnutrition or cancer. The elderly are also more likely to have heart disease, which makes them more vulnerable to the stresses of surgery and puts them at greater risk of post-operative heart attacks and other cardiac complications.

But results from this new study, published in the June 13 issue of JAMA, are the first to show that even slightly abnormal pre-operative red cell counts can have serious post-operative conse-quences. The results also bring new meaning to hematocrit tests: Even though virtually all pa-tients get this screening before major surgery, doctors had little guidance on how to interpret test results that fall just outside the normal range.

“Even though hematocrit tests are nearly universal before elective surgery, doctors don’t have a reliable yardstick for gauging a ‘normal’ or a mildly ‘abnormal’ result. So the test, on many oc-casions, is not very helpful,” said Wen-Chih Wu, M.D., lead author of the JAMA article, assistant professor of medicine at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, and staff car-diologist at the Providence Veteran Affairs Medical Center. “One of my biggest hopes for this research is that it eventually helps doctors better interpret hematocrit test results to improve pa-tient outcomes.”

Wu and his colleagues set out to evaluate the prevalence of pre-operative anemia and poly-cythemia and their effects on 30-day post-operative outcomes for veterans. Wu and his team mined data from the Veterans Affairs National Surgical Quality Improvement Program to conduct their work, looking at medical data of 310,311 veterans aged 65 or older who underwent major non-cardiac surgery. These surgeries, which ranged from total knee replacements to pros-tate surgeries to hernia repairs, took place between 1997 and 2004 in 132 Veterans’ Affairs Medical Centers across the United States.

Researchers used patients’ pre-operative hematocrit screening results, and a review of the scien-tific literature on hematocrit values, to put patients into one of three categories: anemic (hema-tocrit values of less than 39 percent), normal (hematocrit values of between 39 and 54 percent) and polycythemic (hematocrit values of 54 percent or higher). Then, from each point deviation from normal, researchers estimated increases in the risk of death or cardiac events – mainly heart attack and cardiac arrest – 30 days after surgery.

Results were clear: For every percentage point of hematocrit deviation from the normal range, death and cardiac event rates rose by 1.6 percent. This increase in risk was significant and steady. For example, a patient with a pre-operative hematrocrit value of 30 percent has a 14 per-cent increased risk of death 30 days after surgery while a patient with a pre-operative hematrocrit value of 24 percent has a 24 percent increase in their risk of dying.

“We found that, in older men facing surgery, even a mild case of anemia or polycythemia can pose a problem,” Wu said. “The risk of death or a serious cardiac event started when hematrocrit values were 51 percent and higher – values that were previously considered ‘normal.’”

Wu said it was too early to tell if changes in medical care before or during surgeries – such as blood transfusions or iron supplements – could improve outcomes for the elderly with anemia. Right now, Wu and his team are currently studying the impact of different treatment options for the elderly with these low red blood cell counts.

Until those results are in, the current findings give doctors a better yardstick for measuring nor-mal hematocrit values: “Some doctors may have different definitions of what a ‘normal’ hema-trocrit result is for a patient facing surgery. By looking at post-operative outcomes, this study redefined the concept of ‘normal’ hematrocrit values. For elderly patients about to undergo major surgery, maintaining a normal red blood cell count may be beneficial.”




Publication: JAMA

Funding information and declaration of competing interests: US Department of Veterans Affairs

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