Reduction in the homologous blood requirement for abdominal aortic aneurysm repair by the use of preadmission autologous blood donation.

BACKGROUND To evaluate the effectiveness of preadmission autologous blood donation (PABD) in reducing the homologous transfusion requirement of abdominal aortic aneurysm resection, the blood product requirements of 145 patients who underwent operation at Cleveland Clinic from September 1987 through May 1991 were reviewed. METHODS A study group of 73 patients underwent aortic grafting for aneurysm after PABD. Intraoperative autotransfusion (IAT) was used routinely. Homologous blood requirements were compared to those of 72 patients at the same center who underwent similar operations using IAT alone. No significant differences were noted in age, gender, cardiovascular risk factors, operation complexity, intraoperative blood loss, or IAT volumes between the two groups. Mean aneurysm size of the study patients (5.4 cm) was slightly less than that of the comparison patients (6.0 cm) (p < or = 0.001). Patients in the study group received a mean of 1.9 units predeposited autologous blood. RESULTS The mean discharge hematocrit (33.4%) and hemoglobin (11.0 gm/dl) levels of the study group were indistinguishable from those of the comparison group (33.3% and 11.1 gm/dl, respectively). The homologous blood requirement of the study group was significantly less (median, 0; mean, 1.3 units/patient) than that of the comparison group (median, 1.5; mean, 1.9 units/patient) (p = 0.001). Furthermore, 67% (49 of 73 patients) of the study group required no homologous blood although only 36% (26 of 72 patients) of the comparison patients avoided banked blood transfusions (p = 0.0004). No significant differences were found in platelet, fresh frozen plasma, or cryoprecipitate requirements between the study and comparison groups. CONCLUSIONS PABD significantly reduces the homologous blood requirements for elective aortic aneurysm resection and, when used in combination with IAT, eliminates the need for homologous blood in at least two thirds of properly selected patients.