Abstract

Various strategies are utilised to reduce blood loss and allogenic blood transfusion for posterior instrumented correction of Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS). The aim of this study was to evaluate post-operative blood transfusion requirements to determine whether routine cross matching of blood is essential. This is a prospective case series of 84 patients who underwent posterior correction of AIS between September 2016 and March 2018. We reviewed demographic, operative, radiological data and transfusion requirements. Results of transfusion requirements in 44 patients who underwent Ponte osteotomies (F:M = 36:8; mean age 14.8years) were compared with 40 patients (F:M = 9:31; mean age 14.4years) who did not and provided the control group. A transfusion trigger of 80mg/dl with clinical caveats was utilised. Cross matching and procurement costs of allogenic blood/unit were ascertained. Five patients required postoperative blood transfusion on days 2 or 3. Anaesthetic time (p = 0.0003) and preoperative Cobb angle (p = 0.0166) were significant variables between both groups and post-operative Hb (p = 0.0084) and number of levels fused (p = 0.0312) being significant in patients requiring transfusion. Unutilised units on the day of the operation incurred £30,030 (£380/patient or £154/unit) in operational costs. Our audit demonstrates that transfusion on the day of the operation was not required. We recommend that routine crossmatching is not essential for primary posterior correction for AIS with blood conservation techniques. Blood grouping with availability of urgent blood is sufficient at the onset of operation. This has financial implications and cost savings. III.

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