From the Journals

Small-volume blood sample tubes may reduce anemia and transfusions in intensive care


 

FROM JAMA

Implementing Change

Commenting on the findings for this article, Lisa Hicks, MD, a hematologist at St. Michael’s Hospital and associate professor of medicine at the University of Toronto, said, “Routinely collecting smaller volumes of blood for diagnostic testing appears to be feasible and does not cause problems with inadequate sampling. Whether this strategy decreases transfusion is more complicated.” Hicks did not participate in the study.

“At the end of the day, we still don’t know with certainty whether reduced-volume blood collection tubes decrease transfusion burden in ICU patients — it’s possible that there are so many other factors driving down hemoglobin in this population that the impact of blood collection volume is modest to negligible,” she said. “On the other hand, it’s also possible that there is an important impact that was masked by the relatively short ICU stays in the included population.”

Hicks has researched ways to reduce unnecessary diagnostic phlebotomy in ICUs. She and colleagues found that targeting clinicians’ test ordering behavior can decrease blood draws and RBC transfusions.

“What we now know, thanks to Siegal et al, is that we don’t need to collect nearly as much blood from our ICU patients as we do, raising the question of which strategy should really be standard,” she said. “My vote goes for more blood in the patient and less in the bin.”

The study was funded by a peer-reviewed grant from the Academic Health Sciences Centers AFP Innovation Fund/Hamilton Academic Health Sciences Organization and the Hamilton Health Sciences Research Institute through the Population Health Research Institute. Siegal, who is supported by a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Anticoagulant Management of Cardiovascular Disease, reported honoraria for presentations paid indirectly to her institution from BMS-Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Servier, and Roche outside of the submitted work. Hicks reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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