PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Hierarchical improvement of regional tissue oxygenation after packed red blood cell transfusion.

  • Kiran Kumar Balegar V,
  • Madhuka Jayawardhana,
  • Andrew J Martin,
  • Philip de Chazal,
  • Ralph Kay Heinrich Nanan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271563
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 7
p. e0271563

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundIt is well established that counter-regulation to hypoxia follows a hierarchical pattern, with brain-sparing in preference to peripheral tissues. In contrast, it is unknown if the same hierarchical sequence applies to recovery from hypoxia after correction of anemia with packed red blood cell transfusion (PRBCT).ObjectiveTo understand the chronology of cerebral and splanchnic tissue oxygenation resulting after correction of anemia by PRBCT in preterm infants using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS).DesignProspective cohort study.SettingNeonatal intensive care.Patients includedHaemodynamically stable infants: InterventionPRBCT at 15 mL/Kg over 4 hours.Main outcome measuresTransfusion-associated changes were determined by comparing the 4-hour mean pre-transfusion cerebral and splanchnic fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOEc0; FTOEs0) with hourly means during (FTOEc1-4; FTOEs1-4) and for 24 hours after PRBCT completion (FTOEc5-28; FTOEs5-28).ResultsOf 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]weeks, 1 infant was excluded because of corrupted NIRS data. FTOEc significantly decreased during and for 24 hours after PRBCT (p 0.05), indicating failure of improvement in splanchnic oxygenation.ConclusionImprovement in regional oxygenation after PRBCT follows the same hierarchical pattern with a prompt improvement of cerebral but not splanchnic tissue oxygenation. We hypothesise that this hierarchical recovery may indicate continued splanchnic hypoxia in the immediate post-transfusion period and vulnerability to transfusion-associated necrotizing enterocolitis (TANEC). Our study provides a possible mechanistic underpinning for TANEC and warrants future randomised controlled studies to stratify its prevention.