Coagulation inhibition capacities of low-molecular mass and unfractionated heparin, as determined by thrombin generation

1994 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 539-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graciela Elgue ◽  
Javier Sanchez ◽  
Nils Egberg ◽  
Per Olsson
Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 4171-4171
Author(s):  
Debra Hoppensteadt ◽  
Angel Gray ◽  
Evangelos Litinas ◽  
Brigitte Kaiser ◽  
Jawed Fareed

Abstract Abstract 4171 AVE5026 (Sanofi-Aventis, Paris, France) represents an anti-Factor (F) Xa enriched ultra low molecular weight heparin (ULMWH) (Mw=2.4 Kda; anti-FXa activity ∼160 U/mg). In comparison to Enoxaparin it has a lower anti-FIIa activity (∼2 U/mg). The oligosaccharide composition of AVE5026 also differs from Enoxaparin and other LMWHs. Besides the molecular and compositional differences, the biologic half-life of AVE5026 (18-20 hours) is significantly longer than Enoxaparin (4-6 hours). In order to compare the other pharmacodynamic differences between AVE5026, Enoxaparin and unfractionated heparin (UFH), a primate model (macaca mulatto) was used since its tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) profile is comparable to the human response. Individual groups of primates (n=6) were administered with 1 mg/kg SC of either AVE5026, Enoxaparin or UFH. Heptest and APTT measurements were determined on whole blood (WB) and plasma was analyzed for APTT, Heptest, thrombin time (TT), anti-FXa and anti-FIIa effects at varying periods up to 28 hours. TFPI antigen was measured using the assay from Stago (Parsipanny, NJ). Functional TFPI measurements were determined using the kit from American Diagnostica (Stamford, CT). In contrast to UFH, in the WB assays, neither the AVE5026 nor the Enoxaparin produced a strong effect on the APTT and TT, however both demonstrated a strong effect on the heptest assay. AVE5026 produced a much stronger effect with a longer half-life (T½=11 hrs) in comparison to Enoxaparin (T½=6 hrs). In the plasma based systems only UFH produced a measurable effect on the APTT and TT. However, in the heptest and anti-FXa assays, both AVE5026 and Enoxaparin produced a stronger effect, which was much longer with AVE5026 (2-3 fold increase). The plasma time course of TFPI antigen release was longer with AVE5026 in comparison to Enoxaparin and UFH. The ratios of immunologic to functional TFPI levels were also higher in the primates administered with AVE 5026. In the thrombin generation test, AVE5026 produced a sustained effect which lasted longer than Enoxaparin (T½ =16.8 hrs vs. 9.2 hrs.). These results show that AVE5026 produces stronger anti-FXa effects in primates which are associated with a higher circulating level of TFPI and more pronounced suppression of thrombin generation compared to Enoxaparin and UFH. Disclosures: Hoppensteadt: Sanofi-Aventis: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1478-1478
Author(s):  
Jeremy P Wood ◽  
Lisa M Baumann Kreuziger ◽  
Rodney M. Camire ◽  
Umesh R Desai ◽  
Alan E. Mast

Abstract Introduction: Prothrombinase, the complex of factor Xa (FXa) and factor Va (FVa), is inhibited by tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI)α during the initiation of coagulation (Wood JP et al, PNAS 2013). Efficient inhibition of thrombin generation by prothrombinase requires an interaction between the TFPIα basic C-terminus and an acidic region of the FVa B-domain. This acidic region is present in FXa-activated FVa and FVa released from activated platelets, but is rapidly removed by thrombin. Thus, prothrombinase inhibition only occurs during the initiation phase of thrombin generation. As the exosite interaction is charge-dependent, large negatively charged molecules, including unfractionated heparin (UFH), block it, prevent prothrombinase inhibition, and promote thrombin generation. Studies using the negatively charged molecule polyphosphate have suggested a size requirement for blocking this TFPIα activity (Smith SA et al, Blood2010). A similar size-dependence may exist with heparins and could have clinical implications, as currently-used heparins range from long (unfractionated heparin; UFH) to medium (low molecular weight heparins; LMWHs) to short (the antithrombin-binding pentasaccharide fondaparinux). Studies were performed to assess the ability of the LMWHs enoxaparin and dalteparin, fondaparinux, and the nonanticoagulant heparin 2-O, 3-O desulfated heparin (ODSH) to block TFPIα and promote thrombin generation through this mechanism. Methods: TFPIα inhibition of thrombin generation by prothrombinase, assembled with a form of FVa containing the acidic region of the B domain, was measured in the absence or presence of UFH, enoxaparin, dalteparin, fondaparinux, and ODSH. The effect of these compounds on the direct inhibition of FXa by TFPIα was measured using a FXa chromogenic substrate. The effect of these compounds on thrombin generation in plasma was measured by calibrated automated thrombography using human plasma immunodepleted of antithrombin III and heparin cofactor II (AT3/HCII-depleted plasma). Results: TFPIα inhibited prothrombinase activity (IC50 = 6.8 nM), and UFH blocked this inhibition (IC50 = 12.5 nM or 14.9 nM at 0.5 or 1 U/mL, respectively). Enoxaparin (0.8 U/mL; IC50 = 30.3 nM) and dalteparin (1 U/mL; IC50 = 29.7 nM) appeared to be more effective at reversing TFPIα inhibition. The reason for this apparent enhanced effect of LMWHs compared to UFH is not clear, as UFH and the LMWHs similarly enhanced the direct inhibition of FXa by TFPIα, and the differential activity was also observed when heparins were normalized to saccharide concentration. The same pattern was observed when measuring thrombin generation in AT3/HCII-depleted plasma, with LMWHs being more procoagulant than UFH. Consistent with TFPIα inhibition being charge-dependent, ODSH promoted thrombin generation similarly to LMWHs in both purified systems and AT3/HCII-depleted plasma. In contrast, clinical doses of fondaparinux had no effect in any assay. In a purified system, ~1000 times the clinical dose of fondaparinux was required to promote thrombin generation. Conclusion: There is a size-dependence for blocking TFPIα inhibition of prothrombinase using heparins, as the pentasaccharide has no effect. However, both LMWHs and UFH are sufficiently long to express this procoagulant activity at therapeutic doses. In addition, the nonanticoagulant heparin ODSH blocks prothrombinase inhibition by TFPIα. This procoagulant activity is likely most clinically relevant under conditions of antithrombin deficiency, which may result from sepsis, liver failure, or administration of L-asparaginase. Under any of these conditions, UFH, LMWHs, and ODSH may have unanticipated procoagulant activity mediated by blocking TFPIα. Disclosures Camire: Pfizer: Consultancy, Patents & Royalties, Research Funding. Mast:Novo Nordisk: Research Funding.


2011 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 369-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonia Ben-Hadj-Khalifa ◽  
Nathalie Hézard ◽  
Wassim Y. Almawi ◽  
Marie G. Remy ◽  
Bernadette Florent ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virginie Allegret ◽  
Marilyn Dunn ◽  
Christian Bédard

2013 ◽  
Vol 109 (06) ◽  
pp. 1016-1024 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Stevic ◽  
Howard H. W. Chan ◽  
Ankush Chander ◽  
Leslie R. Berry ◽  
Anthony K. C. Chan

SummaryFactor (F)Xa within the prothrombinase complex is protected from inhibition by unfractionated heparin (UFH), enoxaparin and fondaparinux. We have developed a covalent antithrombin-heparin complex (ATH) with enhanced anticoagulant activity. We have also demonstrated that ATH is superior at inhibiting coagulation factors when assembled on artificial surfaces. The objective of the present study is to determine the ability of ATH vs AT+UFH to inhibit FXa within the prothrombinase complex when the enzyme complex is assembled on the more native platelet system. Discontinuous inhibition assays were performed to determine final k 2-values for inhibition of FXa, FXa within the platelet-prothrombinase, or FXa within prothrombinase devoid of various components. Thrombin generation and plasma clotting was also assayed in the presence of resting/activated platelets ± inhibitors. Protection of FXa was not observed for ATH, whereas a moderate 60% protection was observed for AT+UFH. ATH inhibited platelet-prothrombinase ∼4-fold faster than AT+UFH. Relative to intact prothrombinase, rates for FXa inhibition by AT+UFH in prothrombinase complexes devoid of either prothrombin (II)/activated platelets/FVa were higher. However, inhibition by AT+UFH of prothrombinase devoid of FII yielded slightly lower rates compared to free FXa inhibition. Thrombin generation and plasma clotting was enhanced with activated platelets, while inhibition was better by ATH compared to AT+UFH, thus suggesting an overall enhanced anticoagulant activity of ATH against platelet-bound prothrombinase complexes.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2090-2090 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Gueret ◽  
Chantal Krezel ◽  
Paul van Giersbergen ◽  
Eliane Fuseau ◽  
Thierry Lamy ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2090 Poster Board II-67 EP42675 is the first representative of a new class of synthetic parenteral anticoagulants with a dual mechanism of action. EP42675 is an indirect factor Xa inhibitor (antithrombin binding pentasaccharide: fondaparinux analog) and a direct free and clot-bound thrombin (factor IIa) active site inhibitor (peptidomimetic: α-NAPAP analog). EP42675 was assessed in two phase I trials: (i) a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled single ascending dose study, where a single intravenous (IV) bolus of 1, 3, or 10 mg was administered to 3 groups of healthy male subjects (6 EP42675 and 2 matching placebo per group); (ii) a study assessing the effect of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) plus clopidogrel, and unfractionated heparin (UFH) on pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) of EP42675. In this study, 24 healthy male subjects received 5 mg of EP42675 as an IV bolus on day 1, then ASA 100 mg and 75 mg clopidogrel from day 8 to 21. On day 15, they received a second IV bolus of 5 mg of EP42675 and were immediately randomized in 3 groups to receive either placebo, UFH 30 IU/Kg or UFH 60 IU/Kg, thus mimicking the rescue use of UFH in complicated percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI). EP42675 plasma concentrations were measured using anti-Xa and anti-IIa activity specific bioassays (Biomnis, France). EP42675 PD was assessed by global: thrombin generation test (TGT) and activated clotting time (ACT: ACT+ cartridge, Hemochron Signature Elite®, Gamida), and specific coagulation tests performed on a STA-R Evolution® automaton: prothrombin time (PT: Neoplastine CI plus Diagnostica Stago), activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT: PTTA Diagnostica Stago), ecarin clotting time (ECT: Ecarine Diagnostica Stago), anti Xa activity expressed as ΔDO/min (Biophen Heparin Hyphen Biomed®), and thrombin time using purified human alpha thrombin (TT: Hemoclot Thrombin Inhibitors, Hyphen Biomed®). TGT performed on platelet poor plasma (PPP) were triggered with PPP reagent high (20 pM recombinant human tissue factor and 4 μM phospholipids, Biodis) on a Calibrated Automated Thrombogram (CAT™: Diagnostica Stago). The EP42675 plasma concentrations, measured by both anti-IIa and anti-Xa bioassays, showed a high and significant correlation (r=0.99, p<0.0001) indicating that the two active moieties of EP42675 did not dissociate. The plasma concentration versus time curves showed a marked distribution phase followed by a slow terminal phase and a less than proportional increase in exposure with increasing dose, with a half-life between 44.1 and 55.3 hours. EP42675 increased ACT, TGT lag time, TT, aPTT, PT, ECT, and anti-Xa activity. Maximum anticoagulant effect was reached within 2 minutes after bolus injection and lasted for more than 72 hours. The higher sensitivity of the TT test compared to the ECT test is explained by the higher selectivity of the EP42675 antithrombin moiety for the human alpha thrombin. A decrease in TGT endogenous thrombin potential was observed with a complete inhibition of thrombin generation at peak in the 10 mg dose group. The apparent lack of dose response at lower concentrations is likely to be due to interactions between the EP42675 antithrombin moiety with the alpha2 macroglobulin-thrombin complex. As anticipated, the co-administration of UFH induced a dose-dependent further increase in ACT, TGT lag time, TT, aPTT, PT, and anti-Xa activity, while the combination of ASA and clopidogrel did not influence the PK or PD of EP42675. The intra- and inter-subject variability was low for both PK and PD parameters. EP42675 was well tolerated. The only drug-related adverse events were mild hematoma at injection or blood sampling site in 6 subjects, mild gingival hemorrhage in 7 subjects, and mild epistaxis in one subject. No change in liver function tests was observed. These data provide useful information for designing future clinical studies with a single-dose anticoagulant treatment in patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing PCI, and treated with various combinations of antithrombotic drugs. Disclosures: Gueret: Endotis: Research Funding. Krezel:Endotis: Employment. van Giersbergen:Endotis: Consultancy. Fuseau:Endotis: Consultancy. Neuhart:Endotis: Employment.


2005 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 401-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Friederike K. Keating ◽  
Harold L. Dauerman ◽  
Deborah A. Whitaker ◽  
Burton E. Sobel ◽  
David J. Schneider

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