Use of half red blood cell units in oncology patients during severe shortages to extend hospital supply

Author:

Zhuang Lefan1ORCID,Shan Haoyue2,Yang Dongyun2,Woo Jennifer3,Wang Shirong1,Garcia Alexander3,Jackson Ryan1,Yuan Shan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Transfusion Medicine, Department of Pathology City of Hope National Medical Center Duarte California USA

2. Division of Biostatistics, Department of Computational and Quantitative Medicine City of Hope National Medical Center Duarte California USA

3. Division of Transfusion Medicine, Department of Pathology City of Hope Orange County Lennar Foundation Cancer Center Irvine California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe COVID‐19 pandemic exerted an unprecedented impact on the blood supply from 2020 through 2022. As a result, throughout 2021 there were months our hospital had less than one‐day supply of type O RBCs. To meet transfusion needs, whole RBC units were split into half units and issued to stable, non‐bleeding patients. This single‐institution, retrospective study examines time intervals to subsequent transfusion and total numbers of RBC units subsequently transfused after the first half or whole RBC unit.Study Design and MethodsPatients who were transfused RBC between May 21, 2021 and November 1, 2021 were divided into in‐ and outpatient groups, then based on whether they received at least 1 half RBC unit or only whole RBC units during the study period. The time interval between this first half unit transfusion, or first whole unit transfusion in those who did not receive half units, and the subsequent RBC transfusion within 90 days was calculated and compared, as well as the total number of RBC units transfused 30 days after the first unit.ResultsIn general, patients transfused with half units received a subsequent transfusion significantly earlier than those transfused with whole units. Additionally, receiving an index half unit was associated with more RBC transfusions in the following 30 days (p = .001).ConclusionTransfusion of half RBC units during a severe RBC blood shortage can temporarily decrease RBC usage but will result in a shorter interval to the next transfusion and greater total number of RBC units transfused in subsequent days.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference17 articles.

1. Challenges associated with blood banks and blood donations during the COVID-19 pandemic

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3. IHME.COVID‐19 Projections 2022 https://covid19.healthdata.org/united‐states‐of‐america?view=cumulative‐deaths&tab=trend.

4. American Red Cross.American Red Cross faces severe blood shortage as Coronavirus outbreak threatens availability of nation's supply 2020 https://www.redcross.org/about‐us/news‐and‐events/press‐release/2020/american‐red‐cross‐faces‐severe‐blood‐shortage‐as‐coronavirus‐outbreak‐threatens‐availability‐of‐nations‐supply.html.

5. America's Blood Centers.America's Blood Supply (2020) https://americasblood.org/for-donors/americas-blood-supply/.

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