Year: 2022

A New Pacemaker that Works with Light, not Electricity

Pacemakers regulate the heartbeats of people with chronic heart diseases like atrial fibrillation and other forms of arrhythmia. However, pacemaker implantation is an invasive procedure, and the lifesaving pacing the devices provide can be extremely painful. Pacemakers also can only be used to treat a few specific types of disease.

In Science Advances, researchers describe their new pacemaker design that uses light and optogenetics that could be implanted with a less invasive procedure, also causing less pain in operation. As well as triggering cardiac neurons with light, the new design can also be powered by light, removing the need for a battery which has to be surgically replaced.

The study was helmed by researchers in the Gutruf Lab, led by biomedical engineering assistant professor and Craig M. Berge Faculty Fellow Philipp Gutruf.

Currently available pacemakers work by implanting one or two leads, or points of contact, into the heart with hooks or screws. If the sensors on these leads detect a dangerous irregularity, they send an electrical shock through the heart to reset the beat.

“All of the cells inside the heart get hit at one time, including the pain receptors, and that’s what makes pacing or defibrillation painful,” Gutruf said. “It affects the heart muscle as a whole.”

The device Gutruf’s team has developed, yet to be tested in humans, would use a digitally created mesh that would send much more targeted signals.

Modifying cardiac neurons to respond to light

Optogenetics modifies cells, usually neurons, to make them responsive to light. This technique only targets cardiomyocytes, the cells of the muscle that trigger contraction and make up the beat of the heart. This precision will not only reduce pain for pacemaker patients by bypassing the heart’s pain receptors, it will also allow the pacemaker to respond to different kinds of irregularities in more appropriate ways. For example, during atrial fibrillation, the upper and lower chambers of the heart beat asynchronously, and a pacemaker’s role is to get the two parts back in line.

“Whereas right now, we have to shock the whole heart to do this, these new devices can do much more precise targeting, making defibrillation both more effective and less painful,” said Igor Efimov, professor of biomedical engineering and medicine at Northwestern University, where the devices were lab-tested. “This technology could make life easier for patients all over the world, while also helping scientists and physicians learn more about how to monitor and treat the disease.”

To ensure the light signals can reach many different parts of the heart, the team created a design that involves encompassing the organ, rather than implanting leads that provide limited points of contact.

The new pacemaker model consists of four petallike structures made of thin, flexible film, which contain light sources and a recording electrode. The petals, specially designed to accommodate the way the heart changes shape as it beats, fold up around the sides of the organ to envelop it, like a flower closing up at night.

“Current pacemakers record basically a simple threshold, and they will tell you, ‘This is going into arrhythmia, now shock!'” Gutruf said. “But this device has a computer on board where you can input different algorithms that allow you to pace in a more sophisticated way. It’s made for research.”

Because the system uses light to affect the heart, rather than electrical signals, the device can continue recording information even when the pacemaker needs to defibrillate. In current pacemakers, the electrical signal from the defibrillation can interfere with recording capabilities, leaving physicians with an incomplete picture of cardiac episodes. Additionally, the device does not require a battery, which could save pacemaker patients from needing to replace the battery in their device every five to seven years, as is currently the norm.

Gutruf’s team collaborated with researchers at Northwestern University on the project. While the current version of the device has been successfully demonstrated in animal models, the researchers look forward to furthering their work, which could improve the quality of life for millions of people.

Source: University of Arizona

Women with Autism have a Greater Mental Illness Risk

Mirror symbolising schizophrenia
Source: Vince Fleming on Unsplash

Autistic young men and women are more affected by psychiatric conditions and have an increased risk of hospitalisation as a result of their mental illness. Autistic women are particularly vulnerable, as shown in a study published in JAMA Psychiatry.

Autistic people have an increased risk of suffering from mental illness. Current data indicates that autistic women are more vulnerable than autistic men, but few studies have been able to establish that there are sex differences.

The researchers, from Karolinska Institutet, conducted a register-based cohort study with more than 1.3 million people in Sweden who were followed from the age of 16 to 24 between 2001 and 2013. Just over 20 000 of these were diagnosed with autism.

“We saw an increased risk of eleven different psychiatric conditions, including depression, anxiety disorders, self-harm and difficulty sleeping,” says Miriam Martini, a doctoral student in psychiatric epidemiology at Karolinska Institutet and first author of the study.  

High hospitalisation rates 

Something that Miriam Martini finds particularly worrying is that 32 out of 100 autistic women had been hospitalised as a result of their mental illness, compared with 19 out of 100 autistic men. For non-autistic people, the corresponding figure was less than five out of 100.   

The study focuses on young adults who are at a crucial time in their life when many mental health problems increase, while the transition to adulthood often means poorer access to care, says Miriam Martini.   

“Healthcare for young adults needs to be expanded, especially for autistic women, so that mental illness can be detected in time to avoid worsening of symptoms resulting in hospitalization,” says Miriam Martini.  

The reason why autistic women are more affected by mental illness than autistic men is not clear, but in the study, the researchers point to several possible factors. Previous research has shown that autistic women to a greater extent use compensatory behaviours to camouflage their autism, which may be due to the fact that women generally tend to adapt to the expectations of those around them. This delays diagnosis and the provision of assistance, which can negatively affect their mental health.  

Overlooked by the healthcare system 

Another possible explanation may be that it could be difficult to detect autism in women using diagnostic criteria.  

“It may be that autism manifests differently in women than in men, which means that women are not detected using today’s diagnostic criteria. This is something we need to do more research on,” says Miriam Martini.  

Source: Karolinska Institutet

High BMI in Adolescent Males Predicts AF Risk

Photo by Towfiqu Barbhuiya on Pexels

A recent analysis of Swedish military conscripts found that increased body mass index (BMI) in adolescent men is strongly linked developing early atrial fibrillation (AF) as well as with subsequent worse clinical outcomes after being diagnosed with AF.

The study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, included 1 704 467 young men (average age of 18.3 years) enrolled in compulsory military service in Sweden from 1969 through 2005. During a median follow-up of 32 years, 36 693 cases of atrial fibrillation were recorded, at an average age of 52.4 years at diagnosis. Compared with men with a baseline BMI of 18.5–<20.0 kg/m2, men with a BMI of 20.0–<22.5 kg/m2 had a 1.06-times higher risk of developing atrial fibrillation and those with a BMI of 40.0–50.0 kg/ m2 had a 3.72-times higher risk.

In men diagnosed with atrial fibrillation who were followed for a median of approximately 6 years, investigators identified 3767 deaths, 3251 cases of heart failure, and 921 cases of ischaemic stroke. Compared with those with a baseline BMI of <20 kg/m2, those with a baseline BMI of >30 kg/m2 had 2.86-times, 3.42-times, and 2.34-times higher risks of these outcomes, respectively.

“Whether screening for atrial fibrillation in early adulthood among individuals with long-standing obesity and more robust follow-up and initiation of anticoagulants in people with long-standing obesity and atrial fibrillation may improve survival needs to be addressed in future randomised trials” said corresponding author Demir Djekic, MD, PhD, of Sahlgrenska University Hospital/Östra, in Sweden.

Source: Wiley

Body Self-perception is Based on The Brain’s Guesswork

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Researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have found that the perception of one’s own body is largely based on the brain making guesses that are based on probability theory, instead of direct sensory input. The researchers detailed their findings in a study recently published in the journal eLife.

The researchers posit that the way humans perceive their bodies is largely governed by probability assessments based on past experiences, combined with sensory information such as sight and touch, for example.

“The experience of one’s own body is a statistical estimate of reality based on sensory information, sensory uncertainty, and previous experiences that can be summarised in a mathematical model”, explains Henrik Ehrsson, professor at the Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet.

Why are these results important?

“The results clarify the computational functions that govern the perception of one’s own body. This perception thus arises, not only as a result of a “direct” interpretation of signals from sight, touch sense, and proprioception as the textbooks say, but rather is based on active “guesses” that the brain constantly makes based on probability theory and the information that can be extracted from the patterns of sensory signals”, says Henrik Ehrsson.

“When we varied the degree of time delay between the visual and tactile impressions in small steps, or blurred the image in the augmented reality glasses to increase uncertainty, the illusion changed in a way that can be described by equations and curves: increased delay gave a weaker feeling of the rubber hand as its own, while increased uncertainty (blurriness) made the illusion stronger”, says Marie Chancel, corresponding author of the study.

Based on the experiments, the researchers came up with a statistical explanatory model for the brain’s perceptual awareness of its own body.

Changes in body ownership

The next step is to try to understand how the statistical model that determines own-bodily awareness is implemented by neural networks in the brain. In a preliminary study, the researchers have shown that neural activity in posterior parietal cortex follows the Bayesian model well in experiments where they measure brain activity with functional magnetic resonance imaging. The researchers also want to investigate how their model can explain changes in bodily awareness in various psychiatric and neurological conditions, such as Schizophrenia and Anorexia.

Source: Karolinska Institutet

Best Evidence Yet That Lowering Blood Pressure Cuts Dementia Risk

Old man
Source: JD Mason on Unsplash

A global study of over 28 000 people has provided the strongest evidence to date that lowering blood pressure in later life can cut the risk of dementia. The study, which included five randomised controlled trials, was published in the European Heart Journal, and constitutes the highest grade of evidence for this preventative association.

Dr Ruth Peters, Program Lead for Dementia in The George Institute’s Global Brain Health Initiative, said that with no significant dementia treatment breakthroughs being made, reducing the risk of developing the disease would be a welcome step forward.

“Given population ageing and the substantial costs of caring for people with dementia, even a small reduction could have considerable global impact,” she said.

“Our study suggests that using readily available treatments to lower blood pressure is currently one of our ‘best bets’ to tackle this insidious disease.”

Dementia is fast becoming a global epidemic, currently affecting an estimated 50 million people worldwide. This number is projected to triple by 2050 mainly from ageing populations.

Current estimates put the cost at US$20–$40 000 per person with the condition each year.

Dr Peters explained that while many trials have looked at the health benefits of lowering blood pressure, few included dementia outcomes and even fewer were placebo-controlled.

“Most trials were stopped early because of the significant impact of blood pressure lowering on cardiovascular events, which tend to occur earlier than signs of dementia,” she said.

To examine the relationship between blood pressure and dementia more closely, researchers analysed five double-blind placebo-controlled randomised trials that used different blood pressure lowering treatments and followed patients until the development of dementia. A total of 28 008 individuals with an average age of 69 and a history of hypertension from 20 countries were included. Across these studies, the mid-range of follow up was just over four years.

“We found there was a significant effect of treatment in lowering the odds of dementia associated with a sustained reduction in blood pressure in this older population,” said Dr Peters.

“Our results imply a broadly linear relationship between blood pressure reduction and lower risk of dementia, regardless of which type of treatment was used.”

Researchers hope the results will help in designing public health measures to slow the advance of dementia as well as informing treatment, where there may be hesitancy in how far to lower blood pressure in older age.

“Our study provides the highest grade of available evidence to show that blood pressure lowering treatment over several years reduces the risk of dementia, and we did not see any evidence of harm,” said Dr Peters.

“But what we still don’t know is whether additional blood pressure lowering in people who already have it well-controlled or starting treatment earlier in life would reduce the long-term risk of dementia,” she added.

Source: George Institute for Global Health

Training the Immune System to Accept Haemophilia A Treatment

Source: CC0

Haemophilia A, the most common severe form of haemophilia, affects almost exclusively males and can usually be with factor VII injections, but not for all sufferers, as the immune system may treat the factor as an intruder. New research has uncovered an important immune mechanism that targets B cells, which is crucial in making the the therapy effective. The study is published online in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Haemophilia A patients have a defect in factor VIII, a protein key for clotting. Most patients therefore receive an intravenous injection of the functional clotting factor every few days as treatment. But frequently, and especially at the start of treatment, the immune system recognises the injected agent as foreign to the body and attacks it. This is the most serious complication of haemophilia treatment because factor VIII can then no longer work.

In these cases, immune tolerance therapy, which was also developed at the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) more than 40 years ago, often helps. This involves regularly injecting the haemophilia sufferers with a high dose of factor VIII over several months, letting the immune system learn to tolerate it. The underlying immune mechanisms are unknown. “However, this doesn’t always work,” explains Prof Dr Johannes Oldenburg at the UKB. “In about 30 percent of patients, tolerance induction does not lead to success. So your body’s own defences continue to attack and destroy the factor VIII protein, which means that factor VIII cannot be used for treatment. We wanted to know the reason for this.”

To this end, the team looked at two cell types in the immune system, B cells and regulatory T cells. B cells recognise foreign molecules in the body and produce antibodies against them, which switch off the function of the molecule. For factor VIII, this means that it is no longer effective in haemophilia treatment.

Brake in the immune system

Regulatory T cells moderate the strength and duration of the immune response. The researchers have now found a new type of Treg cell that can act specifically against certain B cells rather than the overall immune response. “We were able to show that immunotolerance therapy results in the generation of regulatory T cells that exclusively induce B cells against factor VIII to commit suicide,” says Dr Janine Becker-Gotot of the Institute of Molecular Medicine and Experimental Immunology (IMMEI) at UKB. “These T cells have a sensor that allows them to recognise and attach to the corresponding B cells. In addition, they have the ability to push the self-destruct button on the surface of B cells.”

This button is a molecule called PD-1 which, on activation, leads to apoptosis. Every active B cell has this button. “Our experiments enabled us for the first time to detect regulatory T cells that can activate this self-destruct button only in very specific B cells, in order to specifically prevent unwanted immune responses,” explains IMMEI Director Prof Dr Christian Kurts.

The more PD-1 buttons the B cells against factor VIII carry on their surface, the easier it is for them to be driven to suicide by immune tolerance therapy. “The amount of PD-1 varies from person to person,” Becker-Gotot explains. “If it’s very low to begin with, there’s a good chance that many inhibitor-producing B cells will survive and continue to neutralise the injected factor VIII.”

Test to show in whom immunotolerance therapy is useful

Interestingly, B cells also produce more PD-1 once they come into contact with regulatory T cells. “We can now test how strong this reaction is,” the researcher says. “If PD-1 levels go up shortly after starting immune tolerance therapy and then stay up, that’s a clear sign that the treatment is going to be successful.” The team is currently developing a blood test that can be used to detect whether or not immune tolerance therapy is working in patients during the prolonged treatment.

“Our findings have great basic scientific value,” explains Prof Kurts. “And not just for haemophilia, but also for other congenital disorders where missing proteins are replaced therapeutically. In the long term, they could also be used to develop new treatments.”

Source: University of Bonn

Study Links Vitamin D Deficiency to Premature Death

Photo by Julian Jagtenberg on Pexels

New research in the  Annals of Internal Medicine provides strong evidence that vitamin D deficiency is associated with premature death, prompting calls for people to follow healthy vitamin D level guidelines.

The study by the University of South Australia found that premature mortality increased in line with the severity of Vitamin D deficiency.

First author and UniSA PhD candidate, Josh Sutherland, says that while vitamin D has been connected with mortality, it has been challenging to establish causal effects.

“While severe vitamin D deficiency is rarer in Australia than elsewhere in the world, it can still affect those who have health vulnerabilities, the elderly, and those who do not acquire enough vitamin D from healthy sun exposure and dietary sources,” Sutherland says.

“Our study provides strong evidence for the connection between low levels of vitamin D and mortality, and this is the first study of its kind to also include respiratory disease related mortality as an outcome.

“We used a new genetic method to explore and affirm the non-linear relationships that we’ve seen in observational settings, and through this we’ve been able give strong evidence for the connection between low vitamin D status and premature death.

“Vitamin D deficiency has been connected with mortality, but as clinical trials have often failed to recruit people with low vitamin D levels – or have been prohibited from including vitamin deficient participants – it’s been challenging to establish causal relationships.”

The Mendelian randomisation study (an alternative to the gold standard of a randomised controlled trial) evaluated 307 601 records from the UK Biobank. Low levels of vitamin D were noted as less than <25 nmol/L with the average concentration found to be 45.2 nmol/L. Over a 14-year follow up period, researchers found that the risk for death significantly decreased with increased vitamin D concentrations, with the strongest effects seen among those with severe deficiencies.

Senior investigator Professor Elina Hyppönen says more research is now needed to establish effective public health strategies that can help achieve national guidelines and reduce the risk of premature death associated with low vitamin D levels.

“The take-home message here is simple – the key is in the prevention. It is not good enough to think about vitamin D deficiency when already facing life-challenging situations, when early action could make all the difference,” Prof Hyppönen says.

“It is very important to continue public health efforts to ensure the vulnerable and elderly maintain sufficient vitamin D levels throughout the year.”

Source: University of South Australia

New Drug Combination More Effective in Treating Urinary Tract Infections

E. Coli bacteria. Image by CDC
E. Coli bacteria. Image by CDC

An international study published in JAMA comparing new and older treatments against complicated urinary tract infections has found that a new drug combination of cefepime and enmetazobactam to be more effective, especially against drug-resistant strains.

Researchers in the ALLIUM Phase 3 clinical trial showed that a combination of the drugs cefepime and enmetazobactam was more effective in treating both complicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) and acute pyelonephritis (AP), a bacterial infection causing kidney inflammation, than the standard combination of piperacillin and tazobactam. UTIs are considered complicated when they are associated with risk factors such as fevers, sepsis, urinary obstruction or catheters, that increase the danger of failing antibiotic therapy.

“This new antibiotic was superior to the standard-of-care therapy,” said Professor Keith Kaye at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, the study’s lead author. “It represents an exciting option for treatment.”

Prof Kaye added this drug combination also fights an often-dangerous category of bacterial illnesses caused by pathogens known as extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL) infections, named for an enzyme the bacteria produce. ESBL-producing bacteria can’t be killed effectively by many of the antibiotics conventionally used to treat infections, such as penicillins and cephalosporins.

“We are looking for antibiotics that are active against resistant bacteria, such as ESBLs, and we found this new combination to be highly effective,” Prof Kaye said.

The trial was conducted at 90 sites in Europe, North and Central America, South America and South Africa from September 2018 to November 2019. More than 1000 patients participated in the study. Some 79% of the patients receiving the new combination of cefepime and enmetazobactam were successfully treated for their illness, as opposed to 58.9% of those receiving the conventional treatment of piperacillin and tazobactam.

Of the 20% of patients from the overall group belonging to the subset of those with ESBL infections, 73% receiving cefepime and enmetazobactam achieved a clinical cure, as opposed to 51% on the standard therapy.

The antibiotic cefepime is a fourth-generation cephalosporin that was approved for use in the 1990s and is available generically. Enmetazobactam, an experimental drug made by the French biopharmaceutical company Allecra Therapeutics, is a beta-lactamase inhibitor, meaning it attacks the beta-lactamases, including the types of enzymes produced by ESBL-producing bacteria. The drug combination has been fast-tracked for approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Source: Rutger University

Life Oncology Launches First AI-driven Ethos™ Radiotherapy Cancer Treatment in Sub-Saharan Africa

The Life Oncology unit at Life Vincent Pallotti Hospital today launched the Ethos™  radiotherapy system, a revolutionary new technology, the first in Sub-Saharan Africa, which uses artificial intelligence (AI) and adaptive treatment to adjust cancer treatments in response to patients’ unique, changing needs.

The Ethos™ radiotherapy system allows radiotherapy specialists to treat cancer patients with the most accurate, precision techniques. “Adaptive therapy provides the ability to adapt the treatment plan based on tumour and anatomical changes. The goal is to better target the tumour, reduce radiation dose of healthy tissue, and potentially improve overall outcomes”, says Dr Louis Kathan, Life Healthcare’s Chief Medical Officer in South Africa.

Dr Kathan, who is also a radiation oncologist with close to 15 years of patient treatment experience, explains that the streamlined workflow of Ethos™ radiotherapy is enabled by its AI-driven planning and contouring capabilities. “The system allows us to use AI to adapt to a patient’s anatomy. This allows us to make decisions more efficiently on a daily basis based on each patient’s individual needs. The ability of the machine to deliver on-couch adaptive treatment puts the patient at the centre of care”, he added.

“Clinicians globally have waited for the day when they have the ability to adapt radiotherapy treatments to changes in patient anatomy. Typically changes to a patient’s treatment plan due to changes in anatomy require time-consuming re-scanning and re-planning between treatment sessions, which could take up to two days. The Ethos™ radiotherapy adaptive technology allows the treatment plan to be adjusted daily, in real-time and the treatment to be planned and administered, all within 20 to 30 minutes”, says Kulthum Ismail, unit manager: radiation therapy at the Life Oncology unit based at Life Vincent Pallotti Hospital.

The planning and treatment all happen in one session, making it a faster process compared to existing radiotherapy technology, although Kulthum added that there is still a big role to play for current systems being used.

Kulthum Ismail, unit manager: radiation therapy at the Life Oncology unit based at Life Vincent Pallotti Hospital

The Life Oncology unit at Life Vincent Pallotti Hospital is committed to delivering the very best oncology care with substantial investments made in recent years to technologies to place the hospital at the forefront of advanced treatments in surgical-, medical-, gynaecological- and radiation oncology. These include:

  • The Novalis Tx delivery system
  • Image guided radiosurgery for tumour motion monitoring
  • Respiratory gating (respiration triggered dose delivery)
  • Minimally invasive frameless radiosurgery for patient comfort
  • Radiofrequency ablation
  • Elements Multiple Brain Mets Stereotactic Radiosurgery System which delivers powerful treatment that targets multiple brain metastases (more than one cancer lesion in the brain) simultaneously, faster and more precisely

The Ethos™ radiotherapy system at Life Vincent Pallotti Hospital is already being used to treat patients with cervical, rectum, lung and prostate cancer. In time, other cancers are hoped to be included in the treatment programme. 

“The Ethos™ radiotherapy system offers a faster and more personalised, targeted approach to radiotherapy treatment which means we really are placing the patient at the centre of care,” said Adam Pyle, Life Healthcare’s CEO for South Africa. “It’s our way of navigating our patients into the future of oncology care as we continue to live our purpose of making life better.”

Pete Wharton-Hood, Group Chief Executive for Life Healthcare added that the Group’s aspiration to be a leading cancer care provider has taken a substantial step forward with the expansion at the Life Oncology unit at Life Vincent Pallotti Hospital in Cape Town. “As a people and patient-centric organisation, we continuously seek ways to build on our existing technological offerings and services to consistently improve patient outcomes, enhance our patient experience and drive accessible and affordable healthcare. This means we get to better support our specialists who we partner with, so that together we continue delivering improved patient quality, patient experience, efficiency, and clinical excellence.”

Blood Transfusion Increases Risks in Paediatric Cancer

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Photo by Charlie-Helen Robinson on Pexels

A study published in the Journal of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology found that blood transfusion is associated with adverse outcomes, including infection and higher rates of tumour recurrence — in paediatric solid tumour oncology patients following surgical removal of the tumour.

“Blood transfusion is obviously hugely important when used in the appropriate clinical scenario, but there are some downsides,” said study author Shannon Acker, MD, an assistant professor of paediatric surgery in the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “It’s pro-inflammatory and suppresses the immune system because your body reacts to foreign tissue. It can be a vital intervention, but I think we’re starting to be a little more thoughtful about giving patients blood products.”

Understanding paediatric blood transfusion

Dr Acker and colleagues pursued this research, in part, because while the effects of packed red blood cell (PRBC) transfusion in adult populations have been widely studied, data are sparser for paediatric patients.

“It’s fairly well-documented that in adult patients, perioperative blood transfusion for solid tumour resection is associated with certain adverse outcomes,” Dr Acker explained. “But paediatric cancers are more rare, so they’re more challenging to study. We need more data to understand whether what we know to be true in adult cancers is also true in paediatric cancers.”

Using retrospective data on more than 260 paediatric patients over 11 years, the researchers included malignant solid tumours removed by surgeons across all surgical disciplines. Dr Acker acknowledges that grouping different types of cancer into one study lessens the validity of the research because different cancers have different outcomes, “but we needed a place to start so we can begin working toward more collaborative, multi-centre paediatric oncology research,” she said.

Higher rates of complications

Of the 360 paediatric patients who underwent tumour resection, 194 received a blood transfusion within 30 days of surgery.

Analysing the data, they saw that children who received a blood transfusion had higher rates of post-surgery infectious complications, a shorter disease-free interval, and higher rates of tumour recurrence. They also adjusted for receiving pre-operative chemotherapy and still found that blood transfusion was associated with higher rates of post-operative infectious complications and a shorter disease-free interval.

No relationship was seen between tumour type and rate of infectious complications or disease-free interval.

Providing the best patient care

An aim of the research and its findings is to continue supporting and facilitating conversations and practices about patient care. “Packed red blood cells carry oxygen to the body and help tissues get the oxygen that they need,” Acker says. “They’re essential. It used to be common practice that if a surgeon was taking out a tumour and the patient was losing blood, they would immediately get two units.”

She added that blood transfusion now is recognised as “not a totally benign intervention, so instead of immediately giving a patient two units, we start with one and see if that leads to an appropriate response. Our research shows that each additional unit increases risk of adverse outcomes, so we want to continue being thoughtful in using this intervention.”

Acker adds that a further goal of the research is to work with members of paediatric oncology surgical consortiums to draw data from national and international centres. “The data we have are good, but I don’t think they’re enough to convince people to change institutional protocols. If we can get more validated, multi-centre data, we can begin to look at a more granular level at timing of transfusions and types of cancers so we can continue providing the best patient care.”

Source: University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus