4.0 Article

Splanchnic-cerebral oxygenation ratio associated with packed red blood cell transfusion in preterm infants

Journal

TRANSFUSION MEDICINE
Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 475-483

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tme.12919

Keywords

cerebral tissue oxygenation; necrotizing enterocolitis; neonate; near-infrared spectroscopy; packed red blood cell transfusion; preterm; splanchnic-cerebral oxygenation ratio; splanchnic tissue oxygenation

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Women and Children's Research Foundation [12/191202]

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This study examines the changes in splanchnic-cerebral oxygenation ratio (SCOR) in preterm infants after packed red blood cell transfusion (PRBCT). The results show that a decrease in SCOR after PRBCT does not indicate worsened splanchnic oxygenation, but rather suggests improved cerebral oxygenation. Therefore, it is necessary to determine the individual components of SCOR, namely cerebral and splanchnic tissue oxygenation, to understand changes in SCOR in the context of PRBCT.
Background Splanchnic-cerebral oxygenation ratio (SCOR), the ratio of splanchnic tissue oxygen (StO(2)s) to simultaneously measured cerebral tissue oxygen (StO(2)c), has been described as a surrogate to detect impaired splanchnic oxygenation associated with hypoperfusion status such as necrotizing enterocolitis. This concept is based on the presumption that any change in SCOR indicates a corresponding change in splanchnic tissue oxygenation as the numerator, whereas cerebral tissue oxygenation as the denominator remains stable. However, it is questionable to utilise this concept to detect splanchnic oxygenation changes in the context of packed red blood cell transfusion (PRBCT). Aim The current study examines the contribution of both cerebral and splanchnic oxygenation components to PRBCT-associated SCOR changes in preterm infants. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting Neonatal intensive care. Patients Hemodynamically stable infants: Gestation <32 weeks; birth weight <1500 g; postmenstrual age <37 weeks: tolerating >= 120 ml/kg/day feed volume. Interventions PRBCT at 15 ml/kg, over 4 h. Main Outcome Measures Transfusion-associated changes were determined by performing mixed models for repeated measures analysis between the 4-h mean pre-transfusion values (SCOR 0, StO(2)s 0, and StO(2)c 0) and the post-transfusion hourly mean values for the next 28 h (SCOR 1-28, StO(2)s 1-28, and StO(2)c 1-28). Dunnett's method was used to adjust for the multiplicity of the p value. Results Of 30 enrolled infants 14 [46.7%] male; median [IQR] birth weight, 923 [655-1064] g; gestation, 26.4 [25.5-28.1] weeks; enrolment weight, 1549 [1113-1882] g; and postmenstrual age, 33.6 [32.4-35.0] weeks, one infant was excluded because of corrupted NIRS data. With the commencement of PRBCT, SCOR demonstrated a downward trend throughout the study period. This drift was associated with an increasing StO(2)c trend, while StO(2)s remained unchanged throughout the study period. Conclusions and Relevance PRBCT-associated SCOR decrease suggests improvement in cerebral oxygenation rather than worsening splanchnic oxygenation. Our study underlines that it is necessary to determine individual components of SCOR, namely cerebral and splanchnic StO(2) to understand SCOR changes in the context of PRBCT.

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