Intraoperative blood loss may be associated with myocardial injury after non-cardiac surgery
Jungchan Park, Ji‐Hye Kwon, Seung Hwa Lee, Seung Hwa Lee, Jong‐Hwan Lee, Jeong Jin Min, Jihoon Kim, Ah Ran Oh, Wonho Seo, Cheol Won Hyeon, Kwangmo Yang, Jin-Ho Choi, Sang‐Chol Lee, Sang‐Chol Lee, Kyunga Kim, Joonghyun Ahn, Hyeon‐Cheol Gwon
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to evaluate the association between intraoperative blood loss and myocardial injury after non-cardiac surgery (MINS), which is a severe and common postoperative complication. METHODS: We compared the incidence of MINS based on significant intraoperative bleeding, defined as an absolute hemoglobin level < 7 g/dL, a relative hemoglobin level less than 50% of the preoperative measurement, or need for packed red cell transfusion. We also estimated a threshold for intraoperative hemoglobin level associated with MINS. RESULTS: We stratified a total of 15,926 non-cardiac surgical patients with intraoperative hemoglobin and postoperative cardiac troponin (cTn) measurements according to the occurrence of significant intraoperative bleeding; 13,416 (84.2%) had no significant bleeding while 2,510 (15.8%) did have significant bleeding. After an adjustment with inverse probability weighting, the incidence of MINS was higher in the significant bleeding group (35.2% vs. 16.4%; odds ratio, 1.58; 95% confidence interval, 1.43-1.75; p < 0.001). The threshold of intraoperative hemoglobin associated with MINS was estimated to be 9.9 g/dL with an area under the curve of 0.643. CONCLUSION: Intraoperative blood loss appeared to be associated with MINS. Further studies are needed to confirm these findings. CLINICAL REGISTRATION: The cohort was registered before patient enrollment at https://cris.nih.go.kr (KCT0004244).