TOP: Liberal or restrictive post-op transfusion

Liberal or Restrictive Postoperative Transfusion in Patients at High Cardiac Risk: The TOP Randomized Clinical Trial

Kougias P. JAMA 2025;334:2197-2207. doi:10.1001/jama.2025.20841

Clinical Question

  • In high cardiac risk adults who develop postoperative anaemia following vascular or general surgery, does a liberal transfusion threshold (Hb <10 g/dL) compared to a restrictive transfusion threshold (Hb <7 g/dL) reduce 90‑day incidence of all‑cause death, major ischemic events or acute renal failure? 

Background

  • Postoperative anaemia is common following major vascular or general surgical procedures and has been associated with increased morbidity and mortality in patients at elevated cardiac risk- likely due to increased susceptibility to the associated decline in oxygen delivery
  • Current clinical evidence in stable hospitalised patient advocates for restrictive transfusion practices
  • However, evidence for when to transfuse high cardiac risk postoperative patients remains unclear
  • Postoperative anaemia is a common complication that may contribute to the incidence of postoperative ischemic events (MI, stroke, acute kidney injury) and their associated morbidity/mortality
  • As high-cardiac risk surgical patients are at greater risk of anaemia associated complications, clarifying safe transfusion thresholds in this population is important 
  • Multiple clinical trials in general medical/surgical populations have demonstrated evidence in support of restrictive strategies, however, recent trials in acute MI have suggested harm with this approach (e.g. MINT 

Design

  • Parallel, single‑blind, randomised clinical superiority trial
  • Randomised at a 1:1 ratio to either liberal vs restrictive transfusion thresholds via central, telephone based system
  • Primary endpoint: 90‑day composite of death or major ischemic events/renal failure. 
  • Major ischaemic events consist of myocardial, coronary revascularisation or ischaemic stroke
  • Enrolled participants were randomised if a postoperative inpatient haemoglobin level was detected at less the 10g/dL within 15 days of the index operation
  • Patients were followed up at both 30 and 90 days after randomisation
  • Single‑blind (patients blinded) 
  • Subgroup analyses: age and relative cardiac risk index (RCRI) 
  • Power calculation: 
    • Sample size estimation n= 1520 to detect 25% difference in primary outcome 
    • Based on 22.5% event rate in liberal group and 30% in restrictive
    • 90% power using 2-sided test with an α of 0.05
  • Recruitment terminated early due to funding limitations

Setting

  • 16 Veterans Affairs Medical Centers across the United States
  • Enrollment dates: February 2018 to March 2023

Population

  • Inclusion:
    • Adult veterans (>18 years old) 
    • Elevated cardiac risk 
    • Prior ischaemic heart disease, myocardial infarction, peripheral artery disease, stroke or transient ischaemic attack
    • Developed a post-operative anaemia with a haemoglobin of <10 g/dL
    • Had undergone a major vascular or general surgery
  • Exclusion:
    • Unwilling to receive blood transfusions
    • Active involvement in another interventional trial
    • Active infection with or incomplete recovery from COVID-19
    • Declined consent
    • Active pregnancy
    • Haemodynamically unstable/in cardiogenic shock for ≥48hrs prior to randomisation
    • Prior history of hereditary anaemias, bleeding disorders or previous adverse reactions to blood products
  •  Participant numbers:
    • 44,183 assessed for eligibility, 3022 enrolled
    • 1,428 randomised (largely due to not having a Hb < 10 g/dL)
    • 1,424 analysed (712 per protocol).
  • Comparing baseline characteristics of intervention vs. control group:
    • Age: 69.7 vs 70.2   
    • Male sex: 96.9% vs 98.7% 
    • BMI≥30: 26.5% vs 29.9% 
    • Procedure type (vascular/general): 91.4%/8.6% vs 90.7%/9.3% 
    • RCRI: 
    • Class I: 17.8% vs 17.0% 
    • Class II: 30.3% vs 29.6% 
    • Class III: 27.4% vs 28.7% 
    • Class IV: 24.4% vs 24.7% 
    • Medical History: 
    • Peripheral artery disease: 70.8% vs 73.9% 
    • Coronary artery disease: 58.4% vs 60.1% 
    • Ischaemic stroke or TIA: 21.6% vs 23.5% 
    • Diabetes: 46.9% vs 51.1% 
    • ESKD: 7.7% vs 7.0% 
    • Medications: 
    • Aspirin or clopidogrel: 76.3% vs 75.8% 
    • Anticoagulants: 26.4% vs 28.0% 
    • Baseline Hb (on randomisation day): 9.3 vs 9.0 g/dL

Intervention

  • Liberal transfusion strategy — transfuse PRBC’s when postoperative Hb <10 g/dL.
  • Randomised participants assigned to liberal strategy received transfusions to maintain Hb ≥10 g/dL per protocol until 30 days after randomisation or discharge.
  • Transfusion limits: 
    • Hb≥8.5g/dL, transfuse 1u PRBC
    • Hb 7.5g-8.4dL, transfuse 2u PRBC
    • Hb<7.5dL, transfuse 3u PRBC

Control

  • Restrictive transfusion strategy — transfuse PRBC’s when postoperative Hb <7 g/dL. 
  • Randomised participants in restrictive arm received transfusions only when Hb <7 g/dL per protocol.  
  • Transfusion limits: 
    • Hb 5.5-6.9g/dL, transfuse 1u PRBC 
    • Hb<5.5g/dL, transfuse 2u PRBC  

Management common to both groups and protocol adherence

  • Both patient groups received the same standard postoperative care as protocolised by their treating institution
  • Hb was maintained at 10g/dL or higher in the liberal group and 7g/dL in the restrictive group until discharge or 30 days after randomisation
  • Transfusion data for liberal vs restrictive groups: 
    • Median units before index surgery: 0 vs 0 (4.9 vs 7.6% received at least one)
    • Median units during index surgery: 0 vs 0 (27.3 vs 30.2% received at least one)
    • Median units after index surgery, before randomisation: 0 vs 0 (7.6 vs 4.6% received at least one)
    • Median units (IQR) per participant after randomisation : 2 (1-3) vs 0 (0-0)
      • 1 unit after randomisation: 27.8 vs 12.8%
      • 2 units after randomisation: 24.4 vs 6.2%
      • >= 3 units after randomisation: 41.3 vs 4.1%
  • 114 (not transfused when Hb < 10) vs 39 protocol violations (transfused when Hb > 7) reported in liberal and restrictive groups

Outcome

  • Primary outcome:
    • Primary outcome: 90-day composite of all‑cause death, myocardial infarction, coronary revascularisation, acute kidney failure, or ischemic stroke. 
    • Primary outcome: 9.1% (61/670) vs 10.1% (71/700); RR 0.90 (95% CI 0.65–1.24)
    • No difference in each individual component
    • No difference in subgroups (RCRI, Age, eFigure 2)
  • Secondary outcomes:
  • 90-day composite of non-MI cardiac complications (arrythmias, heart failure, non-fatal cardiac arrest): 
  •  5.9% (38/647) vs 9.9% (67/678); RR 0.59 (95% CI 0.36–0.98)  
  •  No differences in:
    • 90d infectious complications
    • 30d composite of all‑cause death, myocardial infarction, coronary revascularisation, acute kidney failure, or ischemic stroke
    • 1y all-cause mortality  (14.1 vs 15.0%)

Authors’ Conclusions

  • After major vascular or general surgery operations among patients at high risk of a cardiac event, a liberal transfusion strategy did not reduce 90-day death or major ischemic outcome rates compared with a restrictive strategy

Strengths

  • Large multi-center trial (n=1424) addressing a common and important clinical challenge  
  • Clearly identified definitions that were easily measurable for primary outcome
  • Robust length of patient follow-up (90-days for primary composite)
  • Large between group difference in anaemia/Hb levels (mean 2.0g/dL) and blood products received when compared to previous transfusion trials
  • Minimal loss to follow up
  • Relatively low rates of protocol violations 

Weaknesses

  • The study population was almost entirely male veterans
    • This limits the generalisability of the study to female and non-veteran populations  
  • Similarly, the study only involved individuals who had undergone general and predominantly vascular surgery (90%)
  •  Treating clinicians were aware of patient thresholds and may have resulted in performance bias/introduction of additional interventions
  • Event rate was significantly lower than authors’ anticipated  
  • No economic analysis (yet!) – an important consideration given the resource limited nature of blood products

The Bottom Line

  • Compared to traditional restrictive transfusion thresholds, applying liberal transfusion threshold did not significantly reduce the 90day composite of death or major ischemic events 
  • Incidence of non-MI cardiac complications (arrythmia’s, heart failure) were lower in the liberal transfusion strategy group, however, this study was not designed or power to draw conclusions on this outcome
  • Transfusion decisions should always factor in patient symptoms, haemoglobin trend and haemodynamic status rather than strict adherence to protocolised Hb limits

External Links

Metadata

Summary author: Kieran McKenna
Summary date: 1 May 2026
Peer-review editor: George Walker

Picture by: Duks / Pexels

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.