The purpose of this study is to determine if there is a difference in outcomes between liberal transfusion (transfusing when hemoglobin drops below a set higher value number) and conservative transfusion (transfusing when hemoglobin drops below a set lower value number).
Transfusion of Orthopaedic trauma patients is routinely done in asymptomatic individuals as there is no accepted national standard or recommendations from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons or the Orthopaedic Trauma Association for what level of anemia is appropriate in an asymptomatic patient. Individual practitioners typically make this decision based on anecdotal experiences and expert opinion. No prospective study has been performed to date to answer this question in this patient population. The null hypothesis of this proposed pilot study is that no difference will be seen with a liberal transfusion strategy to keep a patient's hemoglobin above 7 g/dL versus a conservative strategy to keep the patient's hemoglobin above 5.5 g/dL in patients asymptomatic at rest. The primary outcome of this pilot study will be infection; defined as postoperative wound infection (superficial or deep) or other perioperative infection but not surgical site (urinary tract infection or pneumonia). Deep infection is defined as the need for intravenous antibiotics or a return to surgery for debridement. Superficial infection is defined as the use of oral antibiotics only successfully treat a surgical site infection. Secondary outcomes will include pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, acute renal failure or insufficiency, nonunion, delayed union, compartment syndrome, osteomyelitis, nerve palsy, anoxic brain injury, cardiac ischemia or infarct, pancreatitis, or death, and the musculoskeletal functional assessment.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
161
Randomization would not occur until the patient's Hgb dropped below 7 g/dL. If the patient is randomized to the liberal arm, they would be transfused to keep their Hgb \>7 g/dL. If the patient is randomized to the conservative arm, they would not be transfused until their Hgb drops below 5.5 g/dL. If the patient's Hgb does not drop below 7.0 g/dL, randomization will not be done.
Postoperative Wound Infection (Superficial or Deep) or Other Perioperative Infection
Deep infection is defined as the need for intravenous antibiotics and/or a return to surgery for debridement. Superficial infection is defined as clinical diagnosis of cellulitis or other superficial infection treated with oral antibiotics only.
Time frame: one year
Combined Secondary Outcomes
Combined (any) Secondary Outcomes: pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, acute renal failure or insufficiency, nonunion, delayed union, compartment syndrome, osteomyelitis, nerve palsy, anoxic brain injury, cardiac ischemia or infarct, pancreatitis, or death.
Time frame: one year
Musculoskeletal Function Assessment
The Musculoskeletal Function Assessment (MFA) evaluates the health status of patients with musculoskeletal disorders of the extremities, including patients with fractures and soft tissue injuries, repetitive motion disorders, osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis. It describes patient functioning, assesses outcomes of surgical interventions and clinical trials, and monitors patients' functional status over time. The MFA is scored from 0 to 100 with 0 representing no dysfunction. Higher MFA scores/values represent a higher levels of dysfunction or worse outcome.
Time frame: one year
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