Sonothrombolysis is effective with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator, but not with Abciximab

2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (12) ◽  
pp. 1274-1277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Ossadnik ◽  
Heiko Hütten ◽  
Günter Seidel ◽  
Jürgen Eggers

SummaryTranscranial “diagnostic” ultrasound (US) has been shown to accelerate thrombolysis related to recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA). In this in vitro study, we evaluated the potential of US to increase clot dissolution mediated by Abciximab (Abc) compared to rt-PA. The effect of 1.8-MHz pulsed wave (PW) Doppler US on dissolution of whole venous blood clots (WBC) and platelet-rich clots (PRC) treated with Abc and rt-PA was investigated in an in vitro model. Clot dissolution was measured by weight loss. Abc-related WBC dissolution was enhanced by additional US, but the effect was not any more detectable when the US was attenuated by a human temporal bone (US-tb). In PRC there was no additional effect of US on the Abc-related clot lysis. Rt-PA-related clot dissolution was increased by US in WBC and PRC as well, however, US-tb was only effective in WBC. The effect of insonation on WBC dissolution treated with the combination of Abc plus rt-PA was lower compared with those treated with rt-PA. In this in vitro experiment, the additional effect of “diagnostic” US in combination with Abc was only present in WBC and less strong than with rt-PA. The results do not support the use of Abc for sonothrombolysis targeting both, fibrin-rich and platelet-rich clots. In contrast, US when combined with rt-PA increases dissolution in both, WBC and PRC as well.

1986 ◽  
Vol 56 (01) ◽  
pp. 035-039 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Collen ◽  
F De Cock ◽  
E Demarsin ◽  
H R Lijnen ◽  
D C Stump

SummaryA potential synergic effect of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator (scuPA) or urokinase on clot lysis was investigated in a whole human plasma system in vitro. The system consisted of a human plasma clot labeled with 125I-fibrinogen, immersed in titrated whole human plasma, to which the thrombolytic agents were added. Clot lysis was quantitated by measurement of released 125I, and activation of the fibrinolytic system in the surrounding plasma by measurements of fibrinogen and α2-antiplasmin.t-PA, scu-PA and urokinase induced a dose-dependent and time-dependent clot lysis; 50 percent lysis after 2 h was obtained with 5 nM t-PA, 20 nM scu-PA and 12 nM urokinase. At these concentrations no significant activation of the fibrinolytic system in the plasma was observed with t-PA and scu-PA, whereas urokinase caused significant α2-antiplasmin consumption and concomitant fibrinogen degradation. The shape of the dose-response curves was different; t-PA and urokinase showed a log linear dose-response whereas that of scu-PA was sigmoidal.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Witt ◽  
B Baldus ◽  
P Donner

Effective thrombolysis in human patients and experimental animals by tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) usually requires t-PA plasma levels in the microgram range. Compared to that physiological plasma levels of t-PA are about 100 - 1000 times lower. To investigate the effects of t-PA at physiological blood levels rat studies were performed in vitro and in vivo employing highly purified recombinant single-chain t-PA (sct-PA: 500,000 IU/mg).t-PA activity in rat whole blood as assessed by dilute blood clot-lysis time (DBC-LT) was increased by addition of sct-PA as low as 3 ng/ml (20 % decrease in DBC-LT). Injection of brady-kinin 10, 100 and 1000 μg/kg i.v. shortened DBC-LT to 54, 23, and 10 % of controls corresponding to the effect of about 10, 30, and 100 ng/ml sct-PA added in vitro. Infusion of sct-PA 15 - 450 μg/kg/h i.v. shortened DBC-LT ex vivo dose-dependently by 20 - 90 % at steady state levels (n = 5). In the same dose range sct-PA inhibited thrombus formation along a silk thread introduced into an arteriovenous shunt in anaesthetized rats. The reduction in thrombus dry weight was dose-dependent amounting to 33 - 67 % of preapplication values (n = 5 - 8) at 15 - 450 μg/kg/h i.v. sct-PA. Already 50 μg/kg/h sct-PA corresponding to a sct-PA activity of about 15 ng/ml displayed a significant (a = 0.05) effect in this model.The results of this study suggest that t-PA present at physiological resting or activation (bradykinin) levels during acute clot formation may have potent antithrombotic efficacy. This study provides further evidence for the importance of a balance coagulation-fibrinolysis which can be influenced on both sides towards thrombophilia as well as to achieve antithrombotic therapy, e.g. by elevating plasma fibrinolytic activity with low-dose t-PA treatment or with drugs which stimulate the endogenous fibrinolytic potential.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 79 (6) ◽  
pp. 1420-1427 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Kunitada ◽  
GA FitzGerald ◽  
DJ Fitzgerald

Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) is less active in vivo and in vitro against clots that are enriched in platelets, even at therapeutic concentrations. The release of radioactivity from 125I-fibrin-labeled clots was decreased by 47% 6 hours after the addition of t-PA 400 U/mL when formed in platelet-rich versus platelet-poor plasma. This difference was not due to the release of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) by platelets. Thus, the fibrinolytic activity of t- PA in the supernatant was similar in the two preparations and fibrin autography demonstrated only a minor degree of t-PA-PAI-1 complex formation. Furthermore, a similar platelet-dependent reduction in clot lysis was seen with a t-PA mutant resistant to inhibition by PAI-1. The reduction in t-PA activity correlated with a decrease in t-PA binding to platelet-enriched clot (60% +/- 3% v platelet-poor clot, n = 5). This reduction in binding was also shown using t-PA treated with the chloromethylketone, D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl (PPACK) (36% +/- 13%, n = 3), and with S478A, a mutant t-PA in which the active site serine at position 478 has been substituted by alanine (43% +/- 6%, n = 3). In contrast, fixed platelets and platelet supernatants had no effect on the binding or lytic activity of t-PA. Pretreatment with cytochalasin D 1 mumol/L, which inhibits clot retraction, also abolished the platelet- induced inhibition of lysis and t-PA binding by platelets. These data suggest that platelets inhibit clot lysis at therapeutic concentrations of t-PA as a consequence of clot retraction and decreased access of fibrinolytic proteins.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
R S Rappaport ◽  
M R Blume ◽  
R L Vogel ◽  
M H Levner ◽  
P P Hung

There is mounting evidence from animal models and the clinic that combination thrombolytic therapy with tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) and single chain urokinase (scuPA) is synergistic. Yet, efforts to demonstrate synergism between these two plasminogen activators in vitro have met with discordant results. Collen et al (Thromb. Haemostasis, 56:35, 1986) reported an absence of synergism between these two agents on clot lysis in an in vitro plasma milieu when they were evaluated at molar ratios of 1:4 (tPA:scuPA and vice versa). Gurewich and Pannell (Thromb. Res., 44:217, 1986), however, reported a synergistic effect on fibrin-specific clot lysis in vitro when the agents were combined in concentrations exceeding molar ratios of 1:4 (tPA:scuPA). Here, we present evidence that synergism between tPA and scuPA may be demonstrated in vitro provided that the molar ratio of tPA to scuPA exceeds 1:4 and that the concentration of clot bound or unbound tPA is minimized. In order to achieve this experimental condition, the standard in vitro plasma clot lysis assay was modified. Human plasma clots were incubated first for a short time in plasma containing varying amounts of tPA. After incubation, the clots were washed thoroughly and reimmersed in plasma alone or in plasma containing varying amounts of scuPA or tPA. Under these conditions, lysis proceeded at a greater rate and to a greater extent when tPA clots were immersed in plasma containing an appropriate amount of scuPA than when they were immersed in plasma alone or in plasma containing appropriate amounts of tPA. Lysis of untreated clots or clots exposed first to scuPA and then to plasma containing varying amounts of scuPA proceeded far less efficiently with a characteristic lag. The enhanced lysis produced by tPA and scuPA obeyed the classical definition of synergy: the same biological effect can be obtained with two drugs together at algebraic fractional combinations of less than 1 (Berenbaum, M.C., Clin. Exp. Immunol., 28:1-18, 1977). Thus, conditions that more closely mimic the in vivo situation resulting from a bolus injection of tPA followed by infusion with scuPA, may provide a system for duplication of in vivo synergism in. vi tro and investigation of the mechanism thereof.


Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
pp. 1482-1487 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Holvoet ◽  
HR Lijnen ◽  
D Collen

Abstract One (MA-1C8) of 36 monoclonal antibodies obtained by fusion of P3X63- Ag8–6.5.3 myeloma cells with spleen cells of mice immunized with purified human tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) blocked the activity of t-PA on fibrin plates but not on chromogenic substrates. MA- 1C8 at a concentration of 200 micrograms/mL inhibited plasma clot lysis and binding of t-PA to the clot. MA-1C8 had no influence on the activation of plasminogen by t-PA, which obeys Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km = 105 mumol/L and kcat = 0.05 s-1; however, it abolished the influence of CNBr-digested fibrinogen on Km. These findings confirm that the stimulatory effect of fibrin on the activation of plasminogen by t-PA is mediated by binding of t-PA to fibrin and provide additional support for the kinetic model. Addition of t-PA to pooled fresh human plasma to a concentration of 5 micrograms/mL resulted in extensive fibrinogen breakdown after incubation for one hour at 37 degrees C or during storage at -20 degrees C for one day. In both instances, fibrinogen degradation was completely prevented by addition of MA-1C8 to a concentration of 200 micrograms/mL of plasma. MA-1C8 also effectively prevented in vitro fibrinogen degradation and in vitro plasminogen activation in plasma samples obtained during infusion of recombinant t-PA in patients with thromboembolic disease. Thus, MA-1C8 is a useful tool for discriminating between in vivo and in vitro fibrinolysis during thrombolytic therapy with t-PA.


Blood ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 1347-1352 ◽  
Author(s):  
ET Fry ◽  
BE Sobel

Abstract Coronary thrombolysis with t-PA is generally implemented with concomitant administration of heparin. However, results of studies in vitro suggest that heparin competes with fibrin for binding of tissue- type plasminogen activator (t-PA), augments activation of free plasminogen, decreases fibrin specificity, and impairs thrombolysis. To define the biological implications of these observations, we characterized effects of therapeutic concentrations of heparin on the binding of t-PA to thrombi formed in whole blood, effects of heparin on activation of plasminogen by t-PA in plasma, and effects of heparin on thrombolysis induced by t-PA in a clot lysis system designed to simulate conditions in vivo. The amount of t-PA bound to thrombi was not affected by heparin (0, 0.5, 1.0, and 5.0 U/mL). When t-PA activity was selectively and irreversibly inhibited by D-Phe-Pro-Arg- chloromethyl ketone (PPACK) the amount of t-PA-PPACK bound was similarly unaffected by heparin. Thrombolysis measured by 125I- fibrin(ogen) release and by reduction of mass of thrombi were not altered by heparin. Heparin did not affect plasminogen consumption induced by t-PA. Plasma concentrations of alpha-2-antiplasmin after exposure of blood to t-PA were less depressed with increasing concentrations of heparin. Thus, heparin in therapeutic concentrations does not interfere with binding of t-PA to thrombi, augment activation of free plasminogen, or inhibit thrombolysis. Accordingly, it appears likely that concomitant administration of heparin will not impair thrombolysis with t-PA implemented clinically.


2008 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 234-237
Author(s):  
Thomas W. Stief

Hyperfibrinolysis is a serious clinical complication. The inhibitory concentrations 50% of antifibrinolytics were analyzed in the microtiter plate clot lysis assay, using 50 µL of plasma clots, 10 µL of antifibrinolytic drug, 10 µL of 354 IU/mL (final) urokinase, 4.46 µg/mL (final) tissue-type plasminogen activator or 0.6 mg/mL plasmin, and 50 µL of pooled normal plasma as clot supernatant. The inhibitory concentrations 50% of lysine against urokinase or tissue-type plasminogen activator is 2.0 or 4.2 mM, against ε-amino-caproic acid 0.7 or 1.5 mM, against tranexamic acid 0.03 or 0.17 mM, respectively. The inhibitory concentrations 50% of lysine, ε-amino-caproic acid, or tranexamic acid against plasmin is 7.4, 0.4, or 0.04 mM. The inhibitory concentrations 50% of aprotinin against urokinase or tissue-type plasminogen activator is about 60 KIU/mL, against plasmin 19 KIU/mL. Lysine might be a new antifibrinolytic drug with a clinically interesting rapid pharmacokinetic. This data help correct dosing of antifibrinolytics to patients with hyperfibrinolysis.


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