American Society of Hirudotherapy

Apixaban for Prevention of Thromboembolism in Pediatric Heart Disease.

Randomized controlled trial published in Journal of the American College of Cardiology (2023)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Randomized controlled trialClinical TrialsDrug DevelopmentPayne et al. · Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2023

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Children with heart disease frequently require anticoagulation for thromboprophylaxis. Current standard of care (SOC), vitamin K antagonists or low-molecular-weight heparin, has significant disadvantages. OBJECTIVES: The authors sought to describe safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics, and efficacy of apixaban, an oral, direct factor Xa inhibitor, for prevention of thromboembolism in children with congenital or acquired heart disease. METHODS: Phase 2, open-label trial in children (ages, 28 days to <18 years) with heart disease requiring thromboprophylaxis. Randomization 2:1 apixaban or SOC for 1 year with intention-to-treat analysis. PRIMARY ENDPOINT: a composite of adjudicated major or clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding. Secondary endpoints: PK, pharmacodynamics, quality of life, and exploration of efficacy. RESULTS: From 2017 to 2021, 192 participants were randomized, 129 apixaban and 63 SOC. Diagnoses included single ventricle (74%), Kawasaki disease (14%), and other heart disease (12%). One apixaban participant (0.8%) and 3 with SOC (4.8%) had major or clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding (% difference -4.0 [95% CI: -12.8 to 0.8]). Apixaban incidence rate for all bleeding events was nearly twice the rate of SOC (100.0 vs 58.2 per 100 person-years), driven by 12 participants with ≥4 minor bleeding events. No thromboembolic events or deaths occurred in either arm. Apixaban pediatric PK steady-state exposures were consistent with adult levels. CONCLUSIONS: In this pediatric multinational, randomized trial, bleeding and thromboembolism were infrequent on apixaban and SOC. Apixaban PK data correlated well with adult trials that demonstrated efficacy. These results support the use of apixaban as an alternative to SOC for thromboprophylaxis in pediatric heart disease. (A Study of the Safety and Pharmacokinetics of Apixaban Versus Vitamin K Antagonist [VKA] or Low Molecular Weight Heparin [LMWH] in Pediatric Subjects With Congenital or Acquired Heart Disease Requiring Anticoagulation; NCT02981472).

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

Publication typeRandomized Controlled TrialJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tResearch Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Indexed MeSH termsChildHumansInfant, NewbornAnticoagulantsFibrinolytic AgentsHeart DiseasesHemorrhageHeparin, Low-Molecular-WeightPyridonesQuality of LifeVenous ThromboembolismVitamin K

Summary

Children with heart disease frequently require anticoagulation for thromboprophylaxis. Current standard of care (SOC), vitamin K antagonists or low-molecular-weight heparin, has significant disadvantages.

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This phase 2, open-label, randomized trial gave apixaban or standard care (vitamin K antagonist or LMWH) to 192 children with congenital or acquired heart disease needing thromboprophylaxis; major or clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding was infrequent in both arms (1 of 129 on apixaban vs 3 of 63 on standard care), no thromboembolic events or deaths occurred, and pediatric drug levels matched adult exposures, supporting apixaban as an alternative to standard care. For the hirudotherapy evidence picture it illustrates the broader anticoagulation landscape into which leech-derived agents like hirudin compete, showing the field's continued search for safer, more convenient thromboprophylaxis than the standard heparin/VKA options. Caveat: this trial concerns an oral factor Xa inhibitor, not hirudotherapy or any leech-derived product; it is a single phase 2 study and its authors frame the efficacy findings as exploratory.

Citation

Apixaban for Prevention of Thromboembolism in Pediatric Heart Disease.

Payne et al. · Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2023

Added to ASH library: May 28, 2026 · Site last updated: June 18, 2026

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