American Society of Hirudotherapy

Current agents for the treatment of patients with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia

Review published in Curr Opin Pulm Med (2002)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Narrative reviewDrug DevelopmentClinical TrialsWarkentin TE · Current opinion in pulmonary medicine, 2002

Abstract

Several counterintuitive treatment paradoxes complicate the management of immune heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT). For example, simple discontinuation of heparin often fails to prevent subsequent HIT-associated thrombosis. Thus, current treatment guidelines recommend substituting heparin with a rapidly acting alternative anticoagulant (eg, danaparoid, lepirudin, or argatroban) even when HIT is suspected on the basis of thrombocytopenia alone ("isolated HIT"). Another paradox-coumarin (warfarin) anticoagulation-can lead to venous limb gangrene in a patient with HIT-associated deep-vein thrombosis. Thus, warfarin is not recommended during acute thrombocytopenia secondary to HIT. However, warfarin can be given as overlapping therapy with an alternative anticoagulant, provided that (1) initiation of warfarin is delayed until substantial platelet count recovery has occurred (to at least above 100 x 10(9)/L); (2) low initial doses of warfarin are used; (3) at least 5 days of overlapping therapy are given; and (4) the alternative agent is maintained until the platelet count has normalized. It has recently been recognized that HIT antibodies are transient and usually do not recur upon subsequent re-exposure to heparin. This leads to a further paradox-patients with previous HIT can be considered for a brief re-exposure to heparin under exceptional circumstances; for example, heart surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass, if HIT antibodies are no longer detectable using sensitive assays. For patients with acute or recent HIT who require urgent heart surgery, other approaches include use of alternative anticoagulants (eg, lepirudin or danaparoid) for cardiopulmonary bypass or antiplatelet agents (eg, tirofiban or epoprostenol) to permit intraoperative use of heparin.

Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.

Publication typeJournal ArticleReview
Indexed MeSH termsAnticoagulantsAntithrombinsArginineAutoimmune DiseasesChondroitin SulfatesDermatan SulfateDrug CombinationsHeparinHeparan SulfateHirudin TherapyHirudinsHumans

Summary

Definitive Warkentin review of HIT treatment paradigm including avoidance of warfarin until platelet recovery and use of danaparoid, lepirudin or argatroban as alternatives.

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This review describes the management paradoxes of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) and notes that guidelines recommend substituting heparin with a rapidly acting alternative anticoagulant, listing lepirudin alongside danaparoid and argatroban, including for cardiopulmonary bypass. The connection to hirudotherapy is that lepirudin is recombinant hirudin, a direct thrombin inhibitor derived from the medicinal leech's anticoagulant, so the article shows leech-derived anticoagulation occupying a recognized clinical niche where heparin is contraindicated. Caveat: this is a narrative review summarizing treatment guidance from other sources rather than primary data, and it concerns a purified recombinant leech protein used as a systemic drug, which is distinct from topical medicinal-leech therapy.

Citation

Current agents for the treatment of patients with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia.

Warkentin TE · Current opinion in pulmonary medicine, 2002

Added to ASH library: May 27, 2026 · Site last updated: June 18, 2026

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