American Society of Hirudotherapy

Hirudin

The most potent natural thrombin inhibitor — and the molecular template for three FDA-approved direct thrombin inhibitor drugs.

Preclinical / mechanisticLast updated: 2026-05-26 · Reviewed by ASH Editorial Board
Molecular weight of Hirudin compared with other characterized leech-derived compoundsHementerin80 kDaHementin80 kDaHementin-Like Protein (HLP-1)80 kDaLeech Collagenase70 kDaHaemadipsa yanyuanensis Progr…70 kDaLeech Apyrase67 kDaCalin65 kDaHyaluronidase60 kDaAntithrombin III binding prot…58 kDaCollagenolytic Fibrinolysin55 kDaLeech Thrombospondin-Like Pro…50 kDaHirudin7 kDa
Molecular weight (kilodaltons) of Hirudin (highlighted) alongside other characterized leech salivary compounds. Smaller proteins/peptides generally diffuse and act faster.

Mechanistic Evidence Box

Preclinical / mechanistic
Page type
Compound profile
Evidence type
The most potent natural thrombin inhibitor — and the molecular template for three FDA-approved direct thrombin inhibitor drugs.
Evidence level
In vitro
Drug vs leech
Purified natural compound
Safety domains
Bleeding · Allergy / anaphylaxis

Clinical translation limit

Hirudin's direct thrombin binding in vitro and in animal models does NOT establish therapeutic efficacy of whole medicinal-leech therapy for any indication outside FDA-cleared microsurgical flap salvage (K040187). Pharmaceutical use of natural hirudin is rare; FDA-approved recombinant analogs (lepirudin, desirudin) and the synthetic analog bivalirudin are separate drugs with their own clinical evidence base.

Molecular Profile

Category
Anticoagulant
Evidence tier
Tier A — FDA-approved derivative
Molecular weight
7,000 Da
Source species
Hirudo medicinalis
Discovered
1884 · John Berry Haycraft (University of Edinburgh)
PubChem CID
258116129704
PDB structures
1HRT4HTC1HUT
Derived FDA-approved drug
Lepirudin (Refludan), Desirudin (Iprivask), Bivalirudin (Angiomax)
Hirudin molecular structure

Biological Targets

  • thrombin (Factor IIa)

Key Citations

  1. Haycraft JB (1884), Proc R Soc Lond
  2. Markwardt F (1957), Naturwissenschaften
  3. Stone SR, Hofsteenge J (1986), Biochemistry · PMID 3768302

Related Anticoagulant Compounds

This website provides educational information and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Medicinal leech therapy carries clinically meaningful risks and should be performed only by qualified clinicians under institutionally approved protocols. FDA 510(k) clearance for medicinal leeches is limited to specific indications; investigational and off-label discussions are labeled accordingly. For patient-specific guidance, consult a qualified healthcare provider.