A study was undertaken to evaluate the current use of autologous blood
predonation within 3 weeks of reduction mammaplasty in our institutio
n. A retrospective study of 153 consecutive patients undergoing reduct
ion mammaplasty between April of 1987 and October of 1992 was analyzed
. Nine patients were excluded because of inadequate data, leaving 81 p
atients in the autologous blood predonation study group and 63 patient
s in the control group. The two groups were similar with regard to age
, preintervention hemoglobin levels, technique of reduction mammaplast
y, average number of grams excised per side, estimated blood loss, and
duration of hospital stay. Those in the study group, despite preopera
tive iron therapy initiated just prior to the time of autologous blood
donation, had significantly lower preoperative hemoglobin levels (p <
0.001). Seventy-two percent of those patients who donated blood preop
eratively received all their blood intraoperatively or within 1 day of
surgery. Eleven percent received 1 of their 2 units donated, and the
remaining 1? percent were not transfused. Despite 83 per cent of the s
tudy group patients receiving all or some of their predonated blood, t
heir postoperative hemoglobin levels were not significantly different
from those of the control group. We concluded that under our current p
rogram, autologous blood predonation for reduction mammaplasty is not
beneficial to the patient in the immediate perioperative period.