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Randomized controlled trial of 7, 28, vs 42 day stored red blood cell transfusion on oxygen delivery (VO 2 max) and exercise duration
Author(s) -
BennettGuerrero Elliott,
Rizwan Sabeen,
Rozensky Russell,
Romeiser Jamie L.,
Brittelli John,
Makaryus Rany,
Lin Jun,
Galanakis Dennis K.,
Triulzi Darrell J.,
Moon Richard E.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
transfusion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.045
H-Index - 132
eISSN - 1537-2995
pISSN - 0041-1132
DOI - 10.1111/trf.16237
Subject(s) - medicine , hemoglobin , apheresis , randomized controlled trial , red blood cell , blood transfusion , oxygen delivery , clinical endpoint , anesthesia , surgery , oxygen , platelet , chemistry , organic chemistry
Background Few studies have rigorously assessed the impact of red blood cell (RBC) transfusion on oxygen delivery. Several large trials demonstrated no clinical outcome differences between transfusion of shorter‐storage vs prolonged‐storage RBCs. These trials did not directly assess functional measures of oxygen delivery. Therefore, it is not clear if 42‐day stored RBCs deliver oxygen as effectively as 7‐day stored RBCs. Study Design and Methods Leukocyte‐reduced RBCs were collected by apheresis in AS‐3. Thirty subjects were randomized (1:1:1) to receive 2 units of autologous RBCs at either 7, 28, or 42 days following donation. VO 2 max testing, using a standardized protocol to exhaustion, was performed 2 days before (Monday) and 2 days after (Friday) the transfusion visit (Wednesday). The primary endpoint was the percent increase in VO 2 max between Monday and Friday. The secondary endpoint was the percent change in duration of exercise for the same time points. Results Hemoglobin levels decreased by 2.8 ± 1.4 g/dL after donation and increased by 2.1 ± 0.6 g/dL after transfusion. This change in hemoglobin was associated with expected decreases (then increases after transfusion) in VO 2 max and exercise duration. No differences were observed between 7‐day and 42‐day RBC transfusion for percent increase in median [IQR] VO 2 max (10.5 [0.2‐17.3] vs 10.9 [5.7‐16.8], P = .41) or for percent increase in exercise duration (5.4 [4.1‐6.9] vs 4.9 [2.0‐7.2], P = .91), respectively. Results were similar for 28‐day RBCs and were consistent across the ITT and per‐protocol analysis populations. Conclusion These data indicate that 42‐day, 28‐day, and 7‐day RBCs have similar ability to deliver oxygen.

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