Lessons Learned from Managing Antithrombotic Therapy in Children Supported with Pediatric Ventricular Assist Devices
Review published in ASAIO J (2022)
Abstract
Stroke, thromboembolism, and bleeding are the most recognized complications associated with pediatric ventricular assist devices (VADs) and the leading cause of death and disability on VAD support. Recently, newer antithrombotic strategies like bivalirudin have emerged that appear to be associated with a reduction in the neurologic event rates, especially for smaller pediatric-specific VADs like the Berlin Heart and PediMag/CentriMag systems where the risk of stroke is the highest. While contemporary antithrombotic therapies have likely contributed to lowering adverse event rates, we speculate that clotting and bleeding adverse events may have dropped because of a variety of other seemingly small changes to antithrombotic management that are independent of the antithrombotic agents used. This view is supported by recent reports documenting low stroke rates with anticoagulants other than bivalirudin, a drug that may have a wider therapeutic window but is not available in all locations throughout the world. The primary purpose of this report is 1) to summarize contemporary antithrombotic regimens used for smaller pediatric VADs today associated with low event rates in the United States and abroad and () to review 10 practical lessons learned and pitfalls to avoid that we believe to be important to reducing bleeding and clotting events based on our collective experience managing pediatric VADs over the past 20 years irrespective of the antithrombotic agents used.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Review of 20 years of pediatric VAD experience identifying bivalirudin role in reducing neurologic events particularly in Berlin Heart and PediMag/CentriMag pediatric systems.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
This review summarizes contemporary antithrombotic regimens for smaller pediatric ventricular assist devices (such as the Berlin Heart and PediMag/CentriMag) and distills ten practical lessons for reducing the stroke, thromboembolism, and bleeding events that are the leading causes of death and disability on VAD support, noting that newer agents like bivalirudin are associated with lower neurologic event rates but are not available everywhere. Its relevance to hirudotherapy is indirect and primarily as antithrombotic-pharmacology context: managing the bleeding-versus-clotting balance is the central challenge that motivates interest in leech-derived anticoagulants such as hirudin and factor-Xa inhibitors. The article does not mention leeches or leech-derived compounds and is an expert narrative review rather than a controlled comparison, so it cannot support any claim about leech therapy and should be cited only to illustrate the broader anticoagulation problem.
Citation
Lessons Learned from Managing Antithrombotic Therapy in Children Supported with Pediatric Ventricular Assist Devices.
Murray JM et al. · ASAIO journal, 2022
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