Abstract

Blood loss during surgery is an important operative complication in patients undergoing major noncardiac surgery and may increase postoperative morbidity and mortality. Variations in the delivery of operative blood transfusions to treat blood loss depend not only on the patient and surgery characteristics but also on the hospital transfusion practices, and may explain differences in the hospitals' postoperative outcomes. We determine the relationship between hospital-level rates of intraoperative blood transfusion and 30-day mortality among older patients with significant intraoperative blood loss. Among 46,608 operative patients aged 65 years or older whose estimated blood loss was 500 mL or greater in 122 Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals during years 1997 to 2004, we examined the relationship between hospital-level transfusion rates and adjusted 30-day postoperative mortality rates using linear regression modeling. Hospital-level rates of intraoperative blood transfusion for older surgical patients with significant blood loss varied from 10% to 92%. Hospitals in the highest tertile for the rate of intraoperative transfusion had the highest number of patients with 500 mL or more surgical blood loss and lowest risk-adjusted 30-day surgical mortality. For every 10% increase in the rate of intraoperative blood transfusion, there was a 0.7% (95% CI: 0.3%-1.1%) decrease in the hospital's adjusted 30-day postoperative mortality for these high-risk patients. Large variation exists in hospitals' intraoperative blood transfusion practices for older patients with significant surgical blood loss. Hospitals with higher transfusion rates for patients with significant surgical blood loss have lower adjusted 30-day mortality for these patients. Hospital intraoperative blood transfusion practices may be a promising surgical quality indicator.

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