Anticoagulants, Thrombolytics Agents and Antiplatelet Drugs

Download Report

Transcript Anticoagulants, Thrombolytics Agents and Antiplatelet Drugs

Antithrombin III
Independent
Anticoagulants
Benedict R. Lucchesi, M.D., Ph.D.
Department of Pharmacology
University of Michigan Medical School
Antithrombin III Independent Anticoagulants
• Hirudin
– From the medicinal leech
– Synthesized by recombinant DNA techniques
– Direct inhibitor of thrombin
• Lepirudin (Refludin™)
– desulfohirudin - a recombinant hirudin* derived from yeast cells.
• Hirugen (bivalirudin, Angiomax™)
– Synthetic dodecapeptide derived from hirudin.
• Argatroban
– Arginine based compound
– Weak competitive inhibitor of thrombin.
• These compounds are used in those patients who have
developed thrombocytopenia during treatment with heparin.
Lepirudin
(Refludin™)
Lepirudin [rDNA] (Refludan™)
•
•
•
•
•
•
highly specific direct inhibitor of thrombin - [Leu1-Thr2]-63desulfohirudin - a recombinant hirudin* derived from yeast cells.
polypeptide - 65 amino acids MW=6979.5
identical to natural hirudin except for the substitution of leucine for
isoleucine at the N-terminal end of the molecule and the absence of a
sulfate group on tyrosine 63.
action independent of ATIII and not inhibited by platelet factor 4
one molecule of lepirudin binds one molecule of thrombin - all
thrombin-dependent coagulation pathways are affected
approved for clinical use in the treatment of heparin-induced
thrombocytopenia type II.
* Hirudin derived from the leech Hirudo medicinalis
Bivalirudin
(Hirulog,
™
Angiomax )
Bivalirudin (Hirulog, Angiomax™)
• Synthetic 20-amino acid peptide analog of naturally
occurring hirudin
• Bivalirudin is a specific and reversible direct thrombin
inhibitor that binds to the catalytic site and the anionbinding exosite of circulating and clot-bound thrombin.
• Inhibition of thrombin prevents activation of factors V,
VIII, and XIII; conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin;
platelet activation and aggregation).
Bivalirudin (Hirulog, Angiomax™)
• The effects of bivalirudin are reversed as thrombin slowly
•
•
cleaves the bilvalirudin-Arg3-Pro4 bond, resulting in
recovery of thrombin active site function.
The onset of anticoagulant effect is immediate after direct IV
injection of bivalirudin.
Bivalirudin therapy prolongs several coagulation assays:
– activated clotting time (ACT),
– activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT),
– thrombin time (TT),
– prothrombin time (PT)
– Coagulation times return to the normal range approximately 1—2
hours after discontinuance of the drug.
•
(A) Structure of bivalirudin and (B)
bivalirudin / hirudin complexes
•
Bivalirudin consists of an active
site-directed moiety linked by a
poly-glycine spacer to a dodecapeptide analogue of the carboxy
terminal of hirudin.
•
Once bivalirudin complexes
thrombin, it is converted from a
noncompetitive inhibitor that
interacts with both the active site
and exosite 1 on thrombin to a
competitive inhibitor that only
binds to exosite 1.
•
Potential for enhanced protein C
activation by bivalirudin. Fluidphase thrombin is complexed and
inhibited by bivalirudin.
•
Upon arrival to the microcirculation
where thrombomodulin is concentrated, the amino-terminal domain
of bivalirudin is released, leaving
only the carboxy-terminal domain
bound to exosite 1 on thrombin.
•
The affinity of thrombomodulin for
thrombin is higher than that of the
carboxy-terminal dodecapeptide of
bivalirudin, thus thrombin binds to
thrombomodulin, where it activates
protein C.
Argatroban
Argatroban
• Argatroban, a synthetic piperidine carboxylic acid derivative of
l-arginine, is an anticoagulant.
• Commercially available argatroban is a racemic mixture of the
R- and S-diastereoisomers in a ratio of approximately 65 to 35,
with the S-isomer having about twice the thrombin-inhibitory
potency of the R-isomer.
• Argatroban, a highly selective, reversible, small-molecule direct
thrombin inhibitor that binds rapidly to the catalytic site/a polar
region of both circulating (free) and clot-bound thrombin.
Argatroban
• Inhibition of thrombin prevents various steps in the
•
•
•
coagulation process (e.g., activation of factors V, VIII, and XIII
and of protein C; conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin; platelet
activation and aggregation).
At infusion rates up to 40 mcg/kg per minute, argatroban
produces dose-dependent increases inactivated partial
thromboplastin time (aPTT) and several other coagulation
assays (activated clotting time [ACT], prothrombin time [PT],
and thrombin time [TT]).
Metabolized principally by the liver via hydroxylation and
aromatization.
Does not induce antibody formation to itself nor does it interact
with heparin-induced antibodies.
Argatroban
• Administered by
continuous IV infusion.
• Before administering
argatroban, all parenteral
anticoagulants must be
discontinued and a baseline
activated partial
thromboplastin time
(aPTT) obtained.
Supplied, as a concentrated
drug (100 mg/ml), which must
be diluted 100-fold prior to
infusion.
Should not be mixed with
other drugs prior to dilution in
a suitable intravenous fluid.