Routine postoperative hemoglobin assessment poorly predicts transfusion requirement among patients undergoing minimally invasive radical prostatectomy Journal Article


Authors: Chesnut, G. T.; Benfante, N.; Barham, D.; Dean, L. W.; Tin, A.; Sjoberg, D. D.; Scardino, P. T.; Eastham, J. A.; Ehdaie, B.; Coleman, J. A.; Donahue, T. F.; Touijer, K. A.; Laudone, V. P.
Article Title: Routine postoperative hemoglobin assessment poorly predicts transfusion requirement among patients undergoing minimally invasive radical prostatectomy
Abstract: Introduction: An advantage of minimally invasive radical prostatectomy over open surgery is decreased blood loss. At our institution hemoglobin is routinely checked 4 and 14 hours post-operatively. We assessed the relevance of this practice in a contemporary cohort undergoing minimally invasive radical prostatectomy. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed data from patients undergoing laparoscopic or robotic radical prostatectomy at our institution between January 2010 and September 2018. We identified 3,631 patients with preoperative and postoperative hemoglobin values, and assessed the role of routine hemoglobin assessment in determining need for transfusion within 30 days. Medicare reimbursement rates for 2019 were used for cost analysis. Results: Of 3,631 patients in our cohort 44 (1.2%) required transfusion. At 4 hours following surgery the median hemoglobin decrease was 8.0% (IQR 4.8 to 11.4) for patients who did not receive transfusion and 12.5% (9.5 to 19.2) for those who received transfusion. At 14 hours the median decrease was 14.2% (IQR 10.0 to 18.4) vs 33.1% (22.6 to 38.6). Routine hemoglobin assessment had no role in the decision to transfuse in 18 patients (41%). No patient was transfused based on 4-hour values alone. Omitting 1 hemoglobin assessment could have resulted in institutional savings of $37,000 during this period. Conclusions: As transfusion following minimally invasive radical prostatectomy is rare, scheduled postoperative hemoglobin assessments in the absence of symptoms are unnecessary to recognize bleeding events. The largest hemoglobin difference between men who did vs did not receive transfusion was seen at 14 hours postoperatively. Thus, this single hemoglobin evaluation is sufficient.
Keywords: postoperative care; postoperative complications; prostatic neoplasms; prostatectomy; surgery; postoperative; metaanalysis; care; hemorrhage; enhanced recovery
Journal Title: Urology Practice
Volume: 7
Issue: 4
ISSN: 2352-0779
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2020-07-01
Start Page: 299
End Page: 304
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000542493300017
DOI: 10.1097/upj.0000000000000108
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC7301724
PUBMED: 32551332
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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MSK Authors
  1. Jonathan Coleman
    341 Coleman
  2. Vincent Laudone
    136 Laudone
  3. Peter T Scardino
    671 Scardino
  4. Karim Abdelkrim Touijer
    257 Touijer
  5. Daniel D. Sjoberg
    234 Sjoberg
  6. Behfar Ehdaie
    173 Ehdaie
  7. James Eastham
    537 Eastham
  8. Timothy Francis Donahue
    72 Donahue
  9. Nicole E Benfante
    160 Benfante
  10. Amy Lam Ling Tin
    114 Tin
  11. Lucas Wyatt Dean
    15 Dean
  12. Gregory Thomas Chesnut
    19 Chesnut
  13. David Barham
    1 Barham