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Standard Issue Red Blood Cell Versus Fresher Red Blood Cell Use In Intensive Care (TRANSFUSE) – A Randomised Controlled Trial Noosa March 2012 Collaboration ANZ – Transfusion medicine Background Blood transfusion associated with increased risk of death in critically unwell patients Marik, CCM 2008 Background Association between age of blood and complications Storage lesion may occur as early as 7 days and established by 14 to 21 days (Berezina J Surg Res 2002, Laczko Transfusion 1979) decreased deformability, increased adhesion and aggregation Retrospective studies show associations between prolonged storage of red blood cells and adverse clinical outcomes Post op pneumonia: cardiothoracic (Vamvakas Transfusion 1999) Sepsis: ICU (Purdy Can J Anaesth 1997) Increased infection: trauma (Offner Arch Surg 2002, Keller J Trauma 2002) Prospective TBI study comparing red cells older than 19 days to freshest no increase in cerebral oxygenation with older blood (Leal‐Noval CCM 2008) Background Background Association between age of blood and complications: A retrospective study in 6,002 cardiac surgery patients Koch, NEJM 2008 Background CTG & ANZIC-RC Blood research program 2008 observational study – ICU patients; 47 sites ANZ 2008 blood bank fridge study and survey – Age of RBCs in current practice 2010 Pilot RCT comparing freshest available vs standard issue RBCs (2 sites) Background Australian and New Zealand prospective observational study (47 ICUs, 747 patients) Pettilä et al. Critical Care 2011,15:R116 Background Pilot RCT results Transfusion and RBC units’ characteristics Characteristics Fresher blood group (n=25) Standard care group (n=26) P Value 12.1 ± 3.8 23 ± 8.4 <0.001 Maximum age, days 15 ± 6.5 26 ± 9.2 <0.001 Minimum age, days 9.5 ± 4.5 20.5 ± 8.9 <0.001 RBC units per patient 3.2 ± 2.6 3.8 ± 3.6 ns Patients transfused before ICU 5 (20%) 5 (19%) ns Patients transfused after ICU 5 (20%) 4 (15%) ns Age of RBC units, days Background Pilot RCT results Transfusion and RBC units’ characteristics Characteristics Fresher blood group (n=25) Standard care group (n=26) P Value 12.1 ± 3.8 23 ± 8.4 <0.001 Maximum age, days 15 ± 6.5 26 ± 9.2 <0.001 Minimum age, days 9.5 ± 4.5 20.5 ± 8.9 <0.001 RBC units per patient 3.2 ± 2.6 3.8 ± 3.6 ns Patients transfused before ICU 5 (20%) 5 (19%) ns Patients transfused after ICU 5 (20%) 4 (15%) ns Age of RBC units, days Background Pilot RCT results Transfusion and RBC units’ characteristics Characteristics Fresher blood group (n=25) Standard care group (n=26) P Value 12.1 ± 3.8 23 ± 8.4 <0.001 Maximum age, days 15 ± 6.5 26 ± 9.2 <0.001 Minimum age, days 9.5 ± 4.5 20.5 ± 8.9 <0.001 RBC units per patient 3.2 ± 2.6 3.8 ± 3.6 ns Patients transfused before ICU 5 (20%) 5 (19%) ns Patients transfused after ICU 5 (20%) 4 (15%) ns Age of RBC units, days Background Pilot RCT results Transfusion and RBC units’ characteristics Characteristics Fresher blood group (n=25) Standard care group (n=26) P Value 12.1 ± 3.8 23 ± 8.4 <0.001 Maximum age, days 15 ± 6.5 26 ± 9.2 <0.001 Minimum age, days 9.5 ± 4.5 20.5 ± 8.9 <0.001 RBC units per patient 3.2 ± 2.6 3.8 ± 3.6 ns Patients transfused before ICU 5 (20%) 5 (19%) ns Patients transfused after ICU 5 (20%) 4 (15%) ns Age of RBC units, days Background Ongoing international studies RECESS (n=1,400) cardiac surgery patients RBC ≤ 10 days old vs ≥ 21 days Low baseline mortality hence surrogate outcome measures Not generalisable to heterogeneous ICU population ABLE (n=2,500) RBC ≤ 7 days old vs standard issue Pragmatically unrealistic, likely underpowered Hypothesis Aim of the TRANSFUSE-RCT To determine whether transfusion of freshest available RBC compared to standard care improves patient survival (90 days mortality) in ICU patients Randomised, controlled, double blinded, multicentre trial Methods Inclusion criteria 1. ICU patient with anticipated stay ≥ 24 hours requiring RBC transfusion Methods 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Exclusion criteria Anticipated length of ICU stay <24hrs Previous RBC transfusion (current hospital admission) Pregnancy Cardiac surgery (current hospital admission) Haematological disease or transplantation Patient has known objection to administration of blood products 7. Patient is moribund (estimated survival <24hrs) 8. Not in patients best interest – treating physicians decision Methods Methods Study procedures 1. Screening of eligible ICU patients (ICU) 2. Web based randomisation (ICU) = study number 3. ICU convey study number to transfusion service by phone when ordering RBC transfusion & on the request slip 4. Transfusion service scientist checks study number on randomisation schedule 5. Scientist allocates either freshest available RBC or standard care (based on study number) 6. ICU team in charge of patient is blind while transfusion service is not blind 7. ICU collect study data & follow up patient at 90 days Timeline Timeline Jan/Feb 2012 – expressions of interest March 2012 – Alfred HREC April – Oct 2012 – ANZ HREC approvals Oct 2012 – Mar 2015 – recruitment July 2015 – complete follow up Aug 2015 – database lock Nov 2015 – submit for publication Budget Payment and Recruitment Plan $500 per patient to ICU $50 per patient to transfusion service Planned enrolment: 5,000 patients Planned sites: 50 in Australia and New Zealand Budget Funding Budget - $3,896,267 NHMRC granted - $2,761,870 (75%) NBA requested - $600,000 ARCBS – supported in principle NZ HRC – application in progress Thank you