Abstract

BackgroundThe prevalence of anaemia in patients planned for total hip and knee arthroplasty is about 20%. Optimising pre-operative haemoglobin levels by iron supplementation has been shown to decrease transfusion rates, complications and associated morbidity. The need for universal screening with iron studies of all elective arthroplasty patients is not clearly defined at present.MethodsRetrospective review of 2 sequential cohorts of patients undergoing primary hip or knee arthroplasty by a single surgeon at a single centre between January 2013 and December 2017. The first group of patients underwent pre-operative iron studies only if found to be anaemic, with a haemoglobin below 12g/dl. From January 2015, all patients irrespective of the presence of anaemia were screened with a complete iron profile before surgery. Patients with a confirmed iron deficiency were administered with intravenous iron prior to surgery. The 2 cohorts were compared with regard to blood transfusion rate post-operatively and cost efficiency for universal screening with iron studies.ResultsThere was a net decrease in the allogenic blood transfusion rate from 4.76 to 2.92% when universal iron studies were introduced but the difference was not statistically significant. Obtaining universal pre-operative iron studies is cost neutral with the price of allogenic blood transfusion in a similar cohort. We also diagnosed 5 patients with occult malignancies.ConclusionsUniversal screening with pre-operative iron studies and iron infusion in elective arthroplasty patients may reduce allogenic blood requirements and is cost neutral. An additional benefit is the potential to diagnose asymptomatic malignancies. Further studies are required to show the true benefit of universal pre-operative iron screening.

Highlights

  • The prevalence of anaemia among patients undergoing elective total knee (TKA) and hip arthroplasty (THA) has been demonstrated to be significant, ranging between 19 and 44%, and increases with age [1,2,3]

  • Allogenic blood transfusion has been associated with increased post-operative infection rates, length of hospital stay and mortality and morbidity [3]

  • Universal screening for iron deficiency of all patients irrespective of Hb level was introduced as part of the pre-operative protocol from January 2015

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Summary

Introduction

The prevalence of anaemia among patients undergoing elective total knee (TKA) and hip arthroplasty (THA) has been demonstrated to be significant, ranging between 19 and 44%, and increases with age [1,2,3]. Allogenic blood transfusion has been associated with increased post-operative infection rates, length of hospital stay and mortality and morbidity [3]. Iron deficiency on its own can cause lethargy, may impair pre-operative haemoglobin (Hb) optimisation and delay post-op Hb recovery and is associated with increased post-operative fatigue and hospital stay [6, 7]. Over half of the body’s iron is stored in Hb, while approximately another 25% is stored intracellularly as ferrous bound to ferritin protein These two biochemical markers are important indicators for patient recovery in the post-operative period as they reflect the iron levels in the body. Optimising pre-operative haemoglobin levels by iron supplementation has been shown to decrease transfusion rates, complications and associated morbidity. The need for universal screening with iron studies of all elective arthroplasty patients is not clearly defined at present

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