4.5 Article

Impact of a Blood Conservation Bundle Checklist on Perioperative Transfusion Rates during Myomectomy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MINIMALLY INVASIVE GYNECOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 269-274

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmig.2020.05.010

Keywords

Myomectomy; Blood conservation; Quality improvement; Knowledge translation; Transfusion

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The study aimed to evaluate the impact of introducing an intraoperative blood conservation bundle (BCB) checklist on perioperative blood transfusion rates during myomectomy. The results showed that the introduction of BCB helped reduce intraoperative blood loss and was in line with best practice care.
Study Objective: The primary objective was to introduce an intraoperative blood conservation bundle (BCB) checklist into clinical practice and assess its impact on perioperative blood transfusion rates during myomectomy. Design: Prospective cohort study with retrospective control group. Setting: A Canadian tertiary-care teaching hospital. Patients: One hundred and eighty-six women who underwent myomectomy. Interventions: The BCB is a physical checklist attached to the patient chart and consists of evidence-based medical and surgical interventions to reduce intraoperative blood loss. It was introduced in October 2018, and data were collected prospectively during a 12-month period for all open, robotic, and laparoscopic myomectomies at our institution. The primary outcome was the perioperative transfusion rate, and the secondary outcomes included estimated intraoperative blood loss, perioperative complications, readmissions, and BCB usage rates. Data were compared with those of a historic control group for a 24-month period before the BCB introduction. Measurements and Main Results: In the pre-BCB period, 134 myomectomies (90 open, 31 robotic, and 13 laparoscopic) were performed, and during our study period, 52 myomectomies (33 open, 10 robotic, and 9 laparoscopic) were performed. There was a decrease in transfusion rate from 15.7% (21/134) to 7.7% (4/52) after introduction of the BCB; however, this was not significant (p = .152). The mean estimated blood loss was lower postintervention (491 mL +/- 440 mL vs 350 mL +/- 255 mL; p < .05) as was the mean delta hemoglobin (-28 g/L +/- 13.0 g/L vs -23 g/L +/- 11.4g/L; p < .05]. The checklist was used in 92.3% of cases (48/52). There were no differences in intraoperative or postoperative complications or readmission rates. Conclusion: Best practice care bundles can improve knowledge translation of guidelines into care delivery. The introduction of the BCB was successful in reducing intraoperative blood loss during myomectomy at our institution. The BCB is a simple, effective tool that can be easily adopted by gynecologic surgeons to guide intraoperative decision-making during myomectomy. (C) 2020 AAGL. All rights reserved.

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