Does preoperative anemia increase the risk of in-hospital postoperative adverse outcomes in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery?
Preoperative anemia independently predicts adverse noncardiac outcomes after CABG, and its impact on overall postoperative events is strongly modulated by baseline comorbidities.
Background— The risk of preoperative anemia in patients undergoing heart surgery has not been described precisely. Specifically, the impact of low hemoglobin per se or combined with other risk factors on postoperative outcome is unknown. Thus, we determined the effects of low preoperative hemoglobin and comorbidities on postoperative adverse outcomes in patients with coronary artery bypass graft in a large comprehensive multicenter study. Methods and Results— The Multicenter Study of Perioperative Ischemia investigated 5065 patients with coronary artery bypass graft at 70 institutions worldwide, collecting ≈7500 data points per patient. In 4804 patients who received no preoperative transfusions, we determined the association between lowest preoperative hemoglobin levels and in-hospital cardiac and noncardiac morbidity and mortality and the impact of concomitant risk factors, assessed by EuroSCORE, on this effect. In patients with EuroSCORE cerebral; P <0.001) outcomes, whereas the increase in cardiac events was due to other factors associated with preoperative anemia. Conclusions— Anemic patients undergoing cardiac surgery have an increased risk of postoperative adverse events. Importantly, the extent of preexisting comorbidities substantially affects perioperative anemia tolerance. Therefore, preoperative risk assessment and subsequent therapeutic strategies, such as blood transfusion, should take into account both the individual level of preoperative hemoglobin and the extent of concomitant risk factors.
Kulier et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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