Global BulletinAll NewsFDA Approval AlertWomen in Oncology
Expert InterviewsAround the PracticeBetween the LinesFace OffFrom All AnglesMeeting of the MindsOncViewPodcastsTraining AcademyTreatment Algorithms with the Oncology Brothers
Conferences
All JournalsEditorial BoardFor AuthorsYear in Review
Frontline ForumSatellite Sessions
CME/CE
Awareness MonthInteractive ToolsNurse Practitioners/Physician's AssistantsPartnersSponsoredSponsored Media
Career CenterSubscribe
Adverse Effects
Brain Cancer
Breast CancerBreast CancerBreast Cancer
Gastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal Cancer
Genitourinary CancersGenitourinary CancersGenitourinary CancersGenitourinary Cancers
Gynecologic CancersGynecologic CancersGynecologic CancersGynecologic Cancers
Head & Neck Cancer
Hematologic OncologyHematologic OncologyHematologic OncologyHematologic Oncology
InfectionInfection
Leukemia
Lung CancerLung CancerLung Cancer
Lymphoma
Neuroendocrine Tumors
Oncology
Pediatric Cancers
Radiation Oncology
Sarcoma
Screening
Skin Cancer & Melanoma
Surgery
Thyroid Cancer
Spotlight -
  • Radiation Oncology
  • Surgery
Adverse Effects
Brain Cancer
Breast CancerBreast CancerBreast Cancer
Gastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal CancerGastrointestinal Cancer
Genitourinary CancersGenitourinary CancersGenitourinary CancersGenitourinary Cancers
Gynecologic CancersGynecologic CancersGynecologic CancersGynecologic Cancers
Head & Neck Cancer
Hematologic OncologyHematologic OncologyHematologic OncologyHematologic Oncology
InfectionInfection
Leukemia
Lung CancerLung CancerLung Cancer
Lymphoma
Neuroendocrine Tumors
Oncology
Pediatric Cancers
Radiation Oncology
Sarcoma
Screening
Skin Cancer & Melanoma
Surgery
Thyroid Cancer
    • Conferences
    • CME/CE
    • Career Center
    • Subscribe

Your AI-Trained Oncology Knowledge Connection!

scout
Advertisement

New Procedures Recommended for Improvement of Surgical Blood Transfusion

October 1, 1997
Publication
Article
OncologyONCOLOGY Vol 11 No 10
Volume 11
Issue 10

Clinical data supporting the use of leukocyte-reduced blood indicates a significant decrease in the risk of infection and cost of recovery in surgical patients, according to a panel of experts.

Clinical data supporting the use of leukocyte-reduced blood indicates a significant decrease in the risk of infection and cost of recovery in surgical patients, according to a panel of experts.

The millions of Americans who undergo surgery each year would benefit significantly from the use of leukocyte-reduced blood in transfusion, according to speakers at the recent American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons (ASCRS) meeting in Philadelphia. Currently reserved for transfusion in the highest-risk surgeries or cancer patients, leukocyte-reduced blood can significantly decrease the risk of infection, improve clinical outcomes, and decrease recovery time, as well as associated hospital costs with most surgical procedures.

“For surgical patients, transfusion-induced immunosuppression, which increases the risk of postoperative infection, is the single greatest mortality risk from transfusion,” said Neil Blumberg, MD, Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, New York. “Procedures that can minimize the risk of these infections, such as the routine use of leukocyte-reduced blood, should become a standard practice for all surgical patients requiring blood transfusions.” He added that the use of leukocyte-reduced blood for surgical patients would represent a potential annual savings of $6,000,000 to $12,000,000 for the US health-care system.

Leukocytes: Culprits of Infection

Blood transfusion has been linked with an increased occurrence of postoperative infections, such as pneumonia, wound infection, and sepsis. This increased risk has been shown in every surgical situation studied, including burn, cardiovascular, colorectal, hip, spinal, and trauma surgery.

“Since most people undergoing surgery are already sick, any measure that can eliminate the risk of additional infections, which can be life-threatening, should be adopted now,” said Richard Spence, MD, Staten Island University Hospital, New York. “Removing leukocytes from donor blood can be easily achieved through the use of blood filters either at the patient’s bedside or in the blood bank.”

Clinical Studies Indicate Reductions in Infection, Hospital Stay, and Costs

Lone Jensen, MD, Aarhus Municipal Hospital, Denmark, discussed the results of a study of 589 colorectal surgery patients that compared infection rates of leukocyte-reduced blood transfusions with allogeneic blood transfusions. She reported that when leukocyte-reduced blood was transfused, infection rates for pneumonia dropped from 23% to 3%. This rate of infection was identical to that seen in patients who received no transfusions. This study also showed that patients who received unfiltered blood had a significantly higher frequency of wound infection (12%) and rate of reoperation (16.9%) compared with patients who were transfused with leukocyte-reduced blood (0% and 3.5%).

A separate study of 915 cardiac surgery patients by van de Watering and coworkers found that leukocyte-reduced blood transfusions resulted in a noteworthy reduction in postoperative mortality by lowering the noncardiac causes of death in the study group. Noncardiac postoperative mortality was 7.6% with allogeneic blood compared with 2.5% with leukocyte-reduced blood by filtration.

“Allogeneic blood transfusion not only correlates with high infection rates but has also been significantly related to an increased length of hospital stay that is required to treat the infection,” stated Paul Tartter, MD, Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York. “Studies have shown a 15% to 35% reduction in hospital stay in surgical patients transfused with leukocyte-reduced blood. This translates into a significant reduction in the costs of hospital care.” Dr. Blumberg noted that the clinical data conclusively show that the use of leukocyte-reduced transfusions considerably decreases the risk of postoperative infections.

Articles in this issue

Vinorelbine in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
Paclitaxel and Vinorelbine in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
Safety Data From North American Trials of Vinorelbine
Cisplatin Alone vs Cisplatin Plus Vinorelbine in Stage IV NSCLC
Doublets and Triplets: New Drug Combinations in the Palliative Care of NSCLC
Current Management of Unresectable Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
Concomitant Cisplatin, Vinorelbine, and Radiation in Advanced Chest Malignancies
Vinorelbine and Carboplatin in the Treatment of Advanced Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
Historical Review of Trials With Vinorelbine in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
The Economics of Prostate Cancer Screening
Single-Agent Pegylated Liposomal Doxorubicin in Cancer: Current Status and Future Applications
Coalition President Urges Policy Board to Focus on the Policy and Practices Affecting Cancer Research
Researchers Studying Effects of Green Tea on Cancer Patients
New Procedures Recommended for Improvement of Surgical Blood Transfusion
Possible New Approach to Brain Tumors in AIDS Patients

Newsletter

Stay up to date on recent advances in the multidisciplinary approach to cancer.

Subscribe Now!
Recent Videos
2 experts in this video
Following progression on a CDK4/6 inhibitor, ascertaining the endocrine sensitivity of HR-positive/HER2-negative disease may inform sequential treatment.
2 experts in this video
T-DXd improved progression-free survival over standard chemotherapy among patients with HR-positive/triple-negative breast cancer in DESTINY-Breast04.
According to Ronan J. Kelly, deciding whether to give nivolumab- or durvalumab-based regimens in gastric cancers may rely on a patient’s frailty.
Related Content

27 Elacestrant vs Standard of Care in ER+, HER2- Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer With ESR1-Mutated Tumors: ESR1 Allelic Frequencies and Clinical Activity From the Phase 3 EMERALD Trial

27 Elacestrant vs Standard of Care in ER+, HER2- Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer With ESR1-Mutated Tumors: ESR1 Allelic Frequencies and Clinical Activity From the Phase 3 EMERALD Trial

Aditya Bardia, MD, MPH;Javier Cortés, MD;Francois Clement Bidard;Guillermo Streich;José García-Sáenz;Janice Lu, MD, PhD ;Giulia Tonini;Simona Scartoni;Alessandro Paoli;Alessio Fiascarelli;Alessandro Bressan;Monica Binaschi;Tomer Wasserman;Virginia Kaklamani, MD, DSc
June 19th 2025
Article

PODCAST: ASCO 2025 Debrief: Key Updates in Genitourinary Cancer Management

PODCAST: ASCO 2025 Debrief: Key Updates in Genitourinary Cancer Management

Manojkumar Bupathi, MD, MS;Benjamin Garmezy, MD
June 19th 2025
Podcast

Manojkumar Bupathi, MD, MS, and Benjamin Garmezy, MD, discuss abstracts from the 2025 ASCO Annual Meeting that may impact genitourinary cancer care.


BGB-16673 antitumor activity occurred particularly among patients with BTK-resistant mutations and those refractory to prior cBTK and ncBTK inhibition.

BGB-16673 Shows Tolerability, Activity in Waldenström Macroglobulinemia

Roman Fabbricatore
June 19th 2025
Article

BGB-16673 antitumor activity occurred particularly among patients with BTK-resistant mutations and those refractory to prior cBTK and ncBTK inhibition.


Experts from Washington University in St. Louis discuss dosing considerations and toxicity management strategies for TROP2-targeted ADCs in NSCLC.

Adopting Best Practices for Administering TROP2-Directed ADCs in NSCLC

Daniel Morgensztern, MD;Mary Ellen Flanagan, NP ;Janelle Mann, PharmD, BCOP
June 16th 2025
Podcast

Experts from Washington University in St. Louis discuss dosing considerations and toxicity management strategies for TROP2-targeted ADCs in NSCLC.


First-Line Radiotherapy Combo May Show Benefit in Oligoprogressive HCC

First-Line Radiotherapy Combo May Show Benefit in Oligoprogressive HCC

Tim Cortese
June 19th 2025
Article

First-line systemic therapy plus radiation therapy improved PFS vs second-line systemic therapy with or without radiation in hepatocellular carcinoma.


Data from the 2025 EHA Congress show developments in novel therapeutic strategies across different multiple myeloma, leukemia, and lymphoma populations.

EHA 2025: Top 5 Takeaways for Hematologic Malignancy Management

Russ Conroy
June 18th 2025
Article

Data from the 2025 EHA Congress show developments in novel therapeutic strategies across different multiple myeloma, leukemia, and lymphoma populations.

Related Content

27 Elacestrant vs Standard of Care in ER+, HER2- Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer With ESR1-Mutated Tumors: ESR1 Allelic Frequencies and Clinical Activity From the Phase 3 EMERALD Trial

27 Elacestrant vs Standard of Care in ER+, HER2- Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer With ESR1-Mutated Tumors: ESR1 Allelic Frequencies and Clinical Activity From the Phase 3 EMERALD Trial

Aditya Bardia, MD, MPH;Javier Cortés, MD;Francois Clement Bidard;Guillermo Streich;José García-Sáenz;Janice Lu, MD, PhD ;Giulia Tonini;Simona Scartoni;Alessandro Paoli;Alessio Fiascarelli;Alessandro Bressan;Monica Binaschi;Tomer Wasserman;Virginia Kaklamani, MD, DSc
June 19th 2025
Article

PODCAST: ASCO 2025 Debrief: Key Updates in Genitourinary Cancer Management

PODCAST: ASCO 2025 Debrief: Key Updates in Genitourinary Cancer Management

Manojkumar Bupathi, MD, MS;Benjamin Garmezy, MD
June 19th 2025
Podcast

Manojkumar Bupathi, MD, MS, and Benjamin Garmezy, MD, discuss abstracts from the 2025 ASCO Annual Meeting that may impact genitourinary cancer care.


BGB-16673 antitumor activity occurred particularly among patients with BTK-resistant mutations and those refractory to prior cBTK and ncBTK inhibition.

BGB-16673 Shows Tolerability, Activity in Waldenström Macroglobulinemia

Roman Fabbricatore
June 19th 2025
Article

BGB-16673 antitumor activity occurred particularly among patients with BTK-resistant mutations and those refractory to prior cBTK and ncBTK inhibition.


Experts from Washington University in St. Louis discuss dosing considerations and toxicity management strategies for TROP2-targeted ADCs in NSCLC.

Adopting Best Practices for Administering TROP2-Directed ADCs in NSCLC

Daniel Morgensztern, MD;Mary Ellen Flanagan, NP ;Janelle Mann, PharmD, BCOP
June 16th 2025
Podcast

Experts from Washington University in St. Louis discuss dosing considerations and toxicity management strategies for TROP2-targeted ADCs in NSCLC.


First-Line Radiotherapy Combo May Show Benefit in Oligoprogressive HCC

First-Line Radiotherapy Combo May Show Benefit in Oligoprogressive HCC

Tim Cortese
June 19th 2025
Article

First-line systemic therapy plus radiation therapy improved PFS vs second-line systemic therapy with or without radiation in hepatocellular carcinoma.


Data from the 2025 EHA Congress show developments in novel therapeutic strategies across different multiple myeloma, leukemia, and lymphoma populations.

EHA 2025: Top 5 Takeaways for Hematologic Malignancy Management

Russ Conroy
June 18th 2025
Article

Data from the 2025 EHA Congress show developments in novel therapeutic strategies across different multiple myeloma, leukemia, and lymphoma populations.

Advertisement
About
Advertise
CureToday.com
OncLive.com
OncNursingNews.com
TargetedOnc.com
Editorial
Contact
Terms and Conditions
Privacy
Do Not Sell My Personal Information
Contact Info

2 Commerce Drive
Cranbury, NJ 08512

609-716-7777

© 2025 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.