The in vitro anticoagulant effects of danaparoid, fondaparinux, and lepirudin in children compared to adults
Research article published in Thrombosis research (2008)
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Major physiological differences in the coagulation system of children compared to that of adults are well documented. We have previously investigated the age-related differences in response to Unfractionated Heparin (UFH). However, the impact of developmental haemostasis on more recent anticoagulant drugs is unknown. A number of these drugs are approved for use in specific indications in adults and none are approved for use in children. This study aimed to determine whether age-related differences in effect and impact on monitoring tests exist in vitro for danaparoid, fondaparinux and lepirudin. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Plasma samples were obtained from healthy children and pooled into age-specific pools, in order to obtain sufficient quantity of plasma required for the analysis of the three drugs. Each age-specific pool was spiked with different concentrations of danaparoid, fondaparinux and lepirudin and response was measured using standard techniques. All experiments were repeated using three separate plasma pools. The effect of each drug in children's plasma was compared to the effect in the respective adult plasma pool. RESULTS: Age-related differences in effect on thrombin potential and monitoring tests were observed only with the drug lepirudin. Specifically, APTT for children up to 5 years of age was increased compared to adults; all children had lower ECT results compared to adults; children up to 10 years of age had increased inhibition of ETP as compared to adults. CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms age-related differences in response to anticoagulants with predominant anti-IIa effect and highlights the need for further research into this area.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Resumen
Peer-reviewed research on anticoagulant and antithrombotic drug development relevant to thrombin and factor inhibition. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Por qué esto importa para la hirudoterapia
Este estudio *in vitro* spiked plasma en pooled de edad específica de niños y adultos sanos con tres anticoagulantes (danaparoid, fondaparinux y lepirudin) y encontró diferencias relacionadas con la edad en el efecto y la monitorización solo para lepirudin, la hirudina recombinante: el aPTT aumentó en niños de hasta 5 años frente a adultos, todos los niños tuvieron resultados ECT más bajos, y los niños de hasta 10 años mostraron una inhibición aumentada del potencial de trombina endógeno. Para la hirudoterapia esto es directamente relevante porque lepirudin es el inhibidor directo de la trombina derivado del secretoma de la sanguijuela, y los datos ilustran que la fisiología del desarrollo cambia cómo se comporta este descendiente de la hirudina, subrayando que los anticoagulantes derivados de la sanguijuela no se escalan simplemente por el tamaño corporal. Nota honesta: esto es trabajo de laboratorio en plasma en pooled spiked, no un estudio clínico en niños tratados, y los autores mismos lo presentan como la confirmación de una señal que necesita más investigación; ninguno de estos fármacos fue aprobado para uso pediátrico, y los hallazgos se refieren al análogo de hirudina purificada en lugar de a la aplicación de sanguijuela medicinal.
Citación
The in vitro anticoagulant effects of danaparoid, fondaparinux, and lepirudin in children compared to adults.
Ignjatovic et al. · Thrombosis research, 2008
Contexto clínico relacionado
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Añadido a la biblioteca ASH: May 28, 2026 · Última actualización del sitio: June 18, 2026