The therapeutic potential of novel anticoagulants
Research article published in Expert opinion on investigational drugs (1997)
Abstract
Conventional anticoagulant therapy has been based on indirect inhibition of coagulation factors with heparin and warfarin. These agents display liabilities prompting the development of new anticoagulants over the last two decades. The first to be developed was a series of low molecular weight heparins(LMWHs). Their favourable pharmacokinetic profiles and risk/benefit ratios led to widespread use in Europe and, more recently, approval for their use in the USA. Paralleling the development of LMWHs has been the pursuit of a different strategy focused on direct rather than indirect inhibition of enzymes in the coagulation cascade. In contrast to heparin, LMWHs, or other glycosaminoglycans, direct inhibitors exert their effects independent of either antithrombin III (ATIII) or heparin cofactor II (HCII) and more effectively inhibit clot-bound thrombin or FXa. Highly potent, selective (versus other serine proteases)direct thrombin and FXa inhibitors have been identified and isolated from natural sources, such as leeches, ticks and hookworms. The recombinant forms and analogues of the senatural proteins have been produced using molecular biology techniques, i.e., rHirudin, Hirulogs, recombinant tick anticoagulant peptide (rTAP), recombinant antistasin (rATS) and recombinant nematode anticoagulant peptide-5 (rNAP-5). The design of novel structures or the modification of existing chemicals has led to the synthesis of many non-peptide, low molecular weight inhibitors of thrombin and FXa. Some of them are orally active and may be suitable for long-term clinical use. In addition, considerable progress has been made in developing specific TF/VIIa complex inhibitors. The anticoagulation properties of the new agents are being characterised in experimental studies. Some of them have been advanced to large scale clinical trials and their effectiveness, and sometimes relative ineffectiveness,in arterial and venous thromboembolic disorders has been demonstrated. They are being tested for their potential as new antithrombotic agents that act via direct enzyme inhibition. Thus,the clinician should in future be able to target different thrombotic conditions with proven, specific anticoagulant interventions.
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 leech-derived and synthetic compounds. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Por qué esto importa para la hirudoterapia
Esta revisión rastrea la transición desde los anticoagulantes indirectos (heparin, warfarin) hacia los inhibidores directos de la trombina y el Factor Xa, y nombra explícitamente a las sanguijuelas, junto con las garrapatas y los anquilostomas, como fuentes naturales de las cuales se aislaron inhibidores directos selectivos y altamente potentes, incluyendo la hirudin recombinante y los análogos de Hirulog. Resulta directamente relevante para la historia del secretoma de la sanguijuela medicinal: sitúa a los anticoagulantes derivados de sanguijuelas como un linaje fundacional en el descubrimiento de fármacos modernos, con varios candidatos avanzados a ensayos clínicos a gran escala para trastornos tromboembólicos arteriales y venosos. Advertencia: se trata de una revisión narrativa que resume trabajos sobre múltiples agentes y fuentes desde finales de la década de 1990, no de datos originales de ensayos, por lo que establece un contexto histórico y mecanístico en lugar de recomendaciones clínicas actuales para cualquier compuesto específico derivado de sanguijuelas.
Citación
The therapeutic potential of novel anticoagulants.
Chi et al. · Expert opinion on investigational drugs, 1997
Contexto clínico relacionado
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Añadido a la biblioteca ASH: May 28, 2026 · Última actualización del sitio: June 18, 2026