Diagnostics (Mar 2023)

Plasma Fibrinogen as a Predictor of Perioperative-Blood-Component Transfusion in Major-Nontraumatic-Orthopedic-Surgery Patients: A Cohort Study

  • Eugenio Pagnussatt Neto,
  • Paula Daniele Lopes da Costa,
  • Sanderland J. Tavares Gurgel,
  • Paula Schmidt Azevedo,
  • Norma S. Pinheiro Modolo,
  • Paulo do Nascimento Junior

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13050976
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 976

Abstract

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There is a trend towards increased perioperative bleeding in patients with plasma fibrinogen levels −1. This study aimed to assess whether there is an association between preoperative fibrinogen levels and perioperative blood-product transfusion up to 48 h after major orthopedic surgery. This cohort study included 195 patients who underwent primary or revision hip arthroplasty for nontraumatic etiologies. Plasma fibrinogen, blood count, coagulation tests, and platelet count were measured preoperatively. A plasma fibrinogen level of 200 mg/dL−1 was the cutoff value used to predict blood transfusion. The mean (SD) plasma fibrinogen level was 325 (83) mg/dL−1. Only thirteen patients had levels −1, and only one of them received a blood transfusion, with an absolute risk of 7.69% (1/13; 95%CI: 1.37–33.31%). Preoperative plasma fibrinogen levels were not associated with the need for blood transfusion (p = 0.745). The sensitivity and the positive predictive value of plasma fibrinogen −1 as a predictor of blood transfusion were 4.17% (95%CI: 0.11–21.12%) and 7.69% (95%CI: 1.12–37.99%), respectively. Test accuracy was 82.05% (95%CI: 75.93–87.17%), but positive and negative likelihood ratios were poor. Therefore, preoperative plasma fibrinogen level in hip-arthroplasty patients was not associated with the need for blood-product transfusion.

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