American Society of Hirudotherapy

Intravenous Direct Thrombin Inhibitors for Acute Venous Thromboembolism or Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia with Thrombosis in Children: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Systematic review published in Semin Thromb Hemost (2024)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Systematic reviewDrug DevelopmentClinical TrialsKiskaddon AL et al. · Semin Thromb Hemost, 2024

Abstract

Intravenous direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) are used for thromboembolic disorders. This systematic review aims to characterize intravenous DTI agents, dosing, monitoring strategies (or use), bleeding, and mortality, in pediatric patients with acute venous thromboembolism (VTE) or heparin-induced thrombocytopenia with thrombosis (HITT). MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane's CENTRAL were searched from inception through July 2023. Case series, retrospective studies, and prospective studies providing per-patient or summary data for patients < 18 years of age with VTE or HITT treated with an intravenous DTI were included. Selection and data extraction were conducted independently by two reviewers. Sixteen studies (7 case reports, 1 case series, 5 retrospective studies, 3 prospective studies) with 85 patients were included. Target conditions included acute VTE in 54 (64%) and HITT in 31 (36%) patients. Bivalirudin, argatroban, and lepirudin were used in 52 (61%), 27 (32%), and 6 (7%) patients, respectively. Fifty-two (61%) patients received a bolus dose, and weighted mean infusion rates for bivalirudin, argatroban, and lepirudin were 0.2 mg/kg/hr, 1.2 mcg/kg/min, and 0.15 mg/kg/hr, respectively. The activated partial thromboplastin time was utilized for monitoring in 82 (96%) patients. Complete or partial thrombus resolution was reported in 53 (62%) patients, mortality in 6 (7%) patients, and bleeding complications in 14 (16%) patients. In this systematic review involving 85 pediatric patients treated with an intravenous DTI for acute VTE or HITT, bivalirudin was the most commonly utilized agent, with a rate of resolution over 60% despite a high acuity in the population studied. Prospective collaborative studies are warranted to establish optimal dosing and further characterize VTE and bleeding outcomes.

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

Publication typeJournal ArticleSystematic Review
Indexed MeSH termsHumansThrombocytopeniaHeparinVenous ThromboembolismChildAntithrombinsThrombosisAcute DiseaseAdolescentFemaleMale

Summary

Intravenous direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) are used for thromboembolic disorders. This systematic review aims to characterize intravenous DTI agents, dosing, monitoring strategies (or use), bleeding, and mortality, in pediatric patients with acute venous thromboembolism (VTE) or heparin-induced thrombocytopenia...

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This systematic review pooled 16 studies (85 patients under 18) using intravenous direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) for acute venous thromboembolism or heparin-induced thrombocytopenia with thrombosis, and reported complete or partial thrombus resolution in 53 of 85 patients (62%), with mortality in 6 (7%) and bleeding complications in 14 (16%); bivalirudin was the most-used agent. The relevance for hirudotherapy is conceptual rather than direct: lepirudin, used in 6 (7%) of these patients, is a recombinant form of hirudin, the anticoagulant first isolated from the medicinal leech (Hirudo) salivary secretome, so this clinical literature illustrates how a leech-derived thrombin-inhibition mechanism translated into approved intravenous drugs. The honest caveat is that this is a small, heterogeneous review built largely on case reports and retrospective data in a high-acuity pediatric population; the authors themselves call for prospective collaborative studies, and it concerns purified/recombinant systemic anticoagulants, not topical leech therapy.

Citation

Intravenous Direct Thrombin Inhibitors for Acute Venous Thromboembolism or Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia with Thrombosis in Children: A Systematic Review of the Literature.

Kiskaddon AL et al. · Semin Thromb Hemost, 2024

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

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