Anemia in ICU
1️⃣ Why Anemia in ICU Is Different
Anemia in the ICU is not just low hemoglobin — it is a complex, multifactorial, inflammation-driven, iatrogenic, and outcome-modifying condition.
- 🔴 > 60–80% of ICU patients develop anemia
- 🔴 ~40–50% receive at least one RBC transfusion
- 🔴 Associated with ↑ mortality, ↑ ventilator days, ↑ LOS
Unlike OPD anemia, ICU anemia is usually:
- Normocytic normochromic
- Inflammation-driven
- Multifactorial
- Often dilutional + blood loss + marrow suppression
2️⃣ Definition
WHO Definition (general population):
- Hb <13 g/dL (men)
- Hb <12 g/dL (women)
⚠️ In ICU practice, transfusion decisions are NOT based on WHO definition but on:
- Hemodynamic stability
- Oxygen delivery-demand balance
- Ongoing bleeding
- Cardiac ischemia
- Lactate trend
3️⃣ Pathophysiology of ICU Anemia
A. 🔥 Inflammation-Mediated Anemia (Most Important)
Sepsis / trauma / surgery → cytokines (IL-6, TNF-α)
Effects:
- ↑ Hepcidin → blocks ferroportin → iron trapped in macrophages
- ↓ Erythropoietin production
- Blunted marrow response
- Reduced RBC lifespan (normally 120 days → ↓ to ~60–90 days)
This is similar to anemia of chronic disease, but more intense.
B. Iatrogenic Blood Loss
- Phlebotomy: 40–70 mL/day
- Arterial line sampling
- Dialysis circuits
- Procedures
In 7–10 days → clinically significant anemia.
C. Hemodilution
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation
- Septic shock
- Massive transfusion
Hb falls not because RBC lost, but plasma volume ↑.
D. Overt Blood Loss
- GI bleed
- Post-surgical
- Trauma
- DIC
E. Nutritional Deficiency
- Iron deficiency
- B12 deficiency
- Folate deficiency
- Protein-energy malnutrition
F. Hemolysis
- Sepsis-associated hemolysis
- ECMO
- CRRT
- Drug-induced
- Microangiopathy (TTP, DIC)
4️⃣ Types of Anemia Seen in ICU
|
Type |
Most Common Cause |
|
Normocytic normochromic |
Inflammation |
|
Microcytic |
Iron deficiency / chronic blood loss |
|
Macrocytic |
B12 / folate deficiency |
|
Hemolytic |
DIC / TTP / mechanical |
5️⃣ Impact on Oxygen Delivery (DO₂)
DO2 =CO×(1.34×Hb×SaO2 +0.003×PaO2 )
👉 Hb is the major determinant of oxygen content.
But critical point:
ICU patients compensate by:
- ↑ Cardiac output
- ↑ Oxygen extraction
- ↓ SVR
Therefore mild-moderate anemia often tolerated.
6️⃣ Clinical Consequences in ICU
- ↑ Myocardial ischemia risk
- ↑ Ventilator dependence
- ↑ ICU length of stay
- ↑ Mortality (association, not always causation)
High-risk groups:
- Coronary artery disease
- Elderly
- Septic shock
- Severe hypoxemia
- Ongoing bleeding
7️⃣ Evaluation of Anemia in ICU (Structured Approach)
Step 1 – Confirm
- Hb trend
- Hematocrit
- Rule out lab error
- Dilution vs true drop
Step 2 – Acute vs Chronic?
|
Feature |
Acute |
Chronic |
|
Hemodynamic instability |
Yes |
Usually no |
|
Reticulocyte count |
↑ (if marrow intact) |
Variable |
|
Symptoms |
Dyspnea, tachycardia |
Often minimal |
Step 3 – Morphology (MCV)
|
MCV |
Likely Cause |
|
<80 |
Iron deficiency |
|
80–100 |
Inflammation |
|
>100 |
B12/Folate |
Step 4 – Reticulocyte Count
- Low → marrow suppression
- High → bleeding / hemolysis
Step 5 – Special Tests
- Iron profile
- Ferritin (↑ in inflammation)
- LDH
- Haptoglobin
- Peripheral smear
- Coombs test
- B12/Folate
- Stool occult blood
8️⃣ Transfusion in ICU – Evidence-Based Practice
🔴 Landmark Trial: TRICC trial
Compared:
- Restrictive (Hb <7 g/dL)
- Liberal (Hb <10 g/dL)
👉 Restrictive strategy had:
- Similar or better survival
- Fewer complications
🔴 TRISS trial
In septic shock:
- 7 g/dL vs 9 g/dL
- No mortality difference
9️⃣ Current Guideline-Based Transfusion Thresholds
✔️ Hemodynamically Stable ICU Patients
Transfuse if Hb < 7 g/dL
✔️ Septic Shock
Threshold = 7 g/dL
✔️ Cardiac Surgery
7–8 g/dL
✔️ Acute Coronary Syndrome
Often 8–9 g/dL (individualized)
✔️ Active Bleeding
Clinical judgment + hemodynamics
🔟 Risks of Transfusion
- TRALI
- TACO
- Immunomodulation
- Infection risk
- Storage lesion
- Hyperkalemia
- Citrate toxicity
Transfusion is NOT benign.
11️⃣ Erythropoiesis Stimulating Agents (ESAs)
- Not routinely recommended
- Consider in:
- Chronic kidney disease
- Prolonged ICU stay
- Jehovah’s Witness patients
Risks:
- Thrombosis
- Hypertension
12️⃣ Iron Therapy in ICU
Oral:
- Poor absorption in inflammation
IV Iron:
- Consider if proven deficiency
- Avoid in active sepsis (controversial)
13️⃣ Blood Conservation Strategies
✔️ Reduce Phlebotomy
- Pediatric tubes
- Closed blood sampling systems
✔️ Tolerate Lower Hb
- Use restrictive transfusion
✔️ Treat Underlying Cause
- Stop bleeding
- Control sepsis
- Correct deficiencies
✔️ Minimize Circuit Loss
- Optimize dialysis/ECMO protocols

