Transfusion Strategies for Patients in Pediatric Intensive Care Units
Université de Montréal · University of Ottawa · +7 more institutions
Abstract
The optimal hemoglobin threshold for erythrocyte transfusions in critically ill children is unknown. We hypothesized that a restrictive transfusion strategy of using packed red cells that were leukocyte-reduced before storage would be as safe as a liberal transfusion strategy, as judged by the outcome of multiple-organ dysfunction.
In this noninferiority trial, we enrolled 637 stable, critically ill children who had hemoglobin concentrations below 9.5 g per deciliter within 7 days after admission to an intensive care unit. We randomly assigned 320 patients to a hemoglobin threshold of 7 g per deciliter for red-cell transfusion (restrictive-strategy group) and 317 patients to a threshold of 9.5 g per deciliter (liberal-strategy group).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
14Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Critically ill
- Organ dysfunction
- Packed red blood cells
- Blood transfusion
- Intensive care
- Hemoglobin
- Good health and well-being