Patients undergoing long-term ventilation often show anemia. The aim of the study was to investigate the duration and success of weaning from mechanical ventilation in patients with RBC transfusion. A retrospective analysis of patient data from a weaning unit was performed. Transfused and non-transfused patients were matched using a propensity score. Of the 249 patients in the database, 31 transfused and the same number of non-transfused cases with similar disease severity as measured by the Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS) could be analyzed. Additional sensitivity analyses were performed. In the group of transfused patients, the difference in weaning duration was longer than in non-transfused patients (1.35 days and 3.26 days, respectively). Weaning success also varied. The risk of weaning failure was twice as high in the group of transfused patients. The groups also differed in terms of mortality, 25.8% of the transfused patients died, while in the non-transfused patients the mortality rate was 6.5%. The risk of death was increased in patients who received RBC transfusion. The differences were not statistically significant. A high proportion of patients with prolonged mechanical ventilation have anemia. RBC transfusion does not improve their prognosis. The need for transfusion is associated with higher mortality and longer duration of weaning in this population. The indication for RBC transfusion should therefore be restrictive.
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