Abstract

Red blood cell transfusions have been associated with infection risk. We investigated whether hospital transfusions are associated with infections in maintenance hemodialysis patients requiring transfusions for chronic anemia. In this retrospective cohort study, hemodialysis patients who experienced an incident hospitalization during 2012-2013 were identified from the Medicare end-stage renal disease database. Hospital transfusions were first categorized into one of five groups based on adjusted likelihood of administering red blood cell transfusions during inpatient hospital stays that occurred over the previous year (2011) among the general Medicare cohort. Next, in a patient-level analysis, patients were categorized according to transfusion use at the incident hospitalization hospital. Outcomes were infection-related rehospitalization and a composite of infection-related hospitalization and all-cause mortality during the 60 days following hospital discharge. We estimated adjusted rate ratios for the association between hospital transfusion use and risk of rehospitalization or the composite endpoint using Poisson regression models. The study included 1578 hospitals and 61,455 hemodialysis patients. Patient characteristics were balanced across hospital transfusion use groups. The overall transfusion rate was 16.0%. The overall 30-day infection-related hospitalization rate (95% confidence interval) per 100 patient-months was 8.8 (8.6-9.1); rates did not differ by transfusion use group. Rate ratios for infection-related rehospitalization were 1.00 (0.91-1.10) over 30 days and 0.98 (0.91-1.05) over 60 days comparing the lowest and highest transfusion use groups. We found no differences in risk of infection-related rehospitalization for patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis across the varying blood transfusion rates of US hospitals.

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