Archive/Patient Blood Management in Total Hip and Knee Arthroplasty Before, During, and After the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Single-Center Retrospective Cohort Study
Patient Blood Management in Total Hip and Knee Arthroplasty Before, During, and After the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Single-Center Retrospective Cohort Study
Alessandra De Angelis, Marco Minelli, Federico Della Rocca et al.
12 mai 2026
en

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Patient blood management (PBM) strategies are effective in reducing transfusion requirements and improving perioperative outcomes in total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic profoundly disrupted hospital organization and limited the application of established PBM protocols. This study assessed the impact of COVID-19-related organizational disruption on PBM implementation and perioperative outcomes in primary total hip and knee arthroplasty. Materials and Methods: This monocentric retrospective study included consecutive patients undergoing primary unilateral THA or TKA between January 2019 and February 2023. Patients were stratified into three periods: pre-COVID-19, during COVID-19, and post-COVID-19. Primary outcomes included transfusion rate, allocated RBC units, PRM transfer, hospital length of stay, and postoperative day-4 hemoglobin levels. Secondary outcomes were factors associated with postoperative day-4 hemoglobin and PRM admission. Results: A total of 5789 patients were included: 1889 in the pre-COVID-19 period, 1416 during COVID-19, and 2484 post-COVID-19. Despite reduced PBM implementation during the COVID-19 period, postoperative Hb levels and transfusion rates remained stable across groups. The number of allocated red blood cell units increased without a corresponding rise in transfusion rates, suggesting a precautionary allocation strategy. A descriptive reduction in median length of stay was observed in the post-COVID-19 phase. A significant decrease in the proportion of patients transferred to Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine departments during the COVID-19 and in the post-COVID-19 period was observed. Multivariable analysis identified age, BMI, preoperative Hb, sex, procedure type, IVFCM administration, and transfusion as predictors of postoperative day-4 Hb, while age, IVFCM administration, transfusion, procedure type, and study period were associated with PRM admission. Conclusions: Despite major organizational disruption, perioperative hemoglobin levels and transfusion rates remained stable, while hospital length of stay decreased. These findings may partly reflect strict selection of already optimized patients; however, this strategy is not equivalent to structured PBM and cannot be generalized to an unselected arthroplasty population.

IPC Classification

A61C07

Keywords

patientbloodmanagementtotalkneearthroplastybeforeduringcovid-19pandemicsingle-centerretrospectivecohortmedicinabackgroundobjectivesstrategieseffectivereducingtransfusionrequirementsimprovingperioperativeoutcomes
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