Interventions for reducing red blood cell transfusion in adults undergoing hip fracture surgery: an overview of systematic reviews

Jun 9, 2023The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Methods to reduce blood transfusions in adults having hip fracture surgery: a summary of reviews

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Abstract

Tranexamic acid may reduce the need for allogenic blood transfusions (ABT) by 194 fewer people per 1000 after hip fracture surgery.

  • In adults undergoing hip fracture surgery, tranexamic acid likely reduces the number of people requiring ABT.
  • The volume of transfused packed red blood cells is probably reduced by tranexamic acid, with a mean difference of 0.53 fewer units.
  • Adverse events associated with tranexamic acid, such as deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, show probably little or no difference compared to controls.
  • Evidence on iron treatment suggests it may have little or no impact on the need for ABT or other clinical outcomes, but this is based on limited studies.
  • The methodological quality of included reviews is generally low, indicating uncertainty in the findings.
  • Current reviews did not sufficiently address patient-reported outcomes, highlighting gaps in the evidence for overall treatment effectiveness.

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