American Society of Hirudotherapy

Leech Extracts (Piyavit)

Lyophilized whole-leech extract: preclinical pharmacology, clinical evidence, and regulatory status

Last Updated: March 1, 2026Reviewed by: Andrei Dokukin, MDRegulatory Status: Investigational (Tier 3)GRADE: Low

Investigational / Research Priority

Piyavit is a lyophilized whole-leech extract registered in Russia (1994) for superficial vein thrombophlebitis and diabetic angiopathies. It has demonstrated 10 distinct pharmacodynamic properties in preclinical studies and has been evaluated in 9 clinical studies enrolling more than 370 patients across thrombotic, diabetic, and cerebrovascular conditions. Piyavit is not approved by the FDA, is not available in the United States, and has never been submitted for regulatory review outside Russia. The data presented here are of research interest for the potential development of standardized leech-based pharmaceuticals or nutraceuticals.

Investigational Application

pharmacology is not included in the FDA 510(k) clearance for medicinal leeches. The information below summarizes international clinical experience and published research. ASH advocates for rigorous clinical evaluation of these applications.

International Clinical Evidence

The following evidence reflects international clinical experience. Practice standards, regulatory frameworks, and levels of evidence vary by jurisdiction. U.S. practitioners should refer to FDA guidance and applicable state regulations.

The medicinal leech (Hirudo medicinalis) delivers a multicomponent cocktail of hemostasis regulators into the host's microcirculation during feeding. The piyavit research program, conducted primarily between 1986 and 2001 under the direction of I.P. Baskova and colleagues, addressed whether that cocktail could be preserved, stabilized, and repackaged for oral delivery. The formulation they developed — piyavit — served as a proof-of-concept that whole-organism leech extracts retain multicomponent pharmacologic activity after lyophilization, encapsulation, and gastrointestinal transit. While this formulation has never been approved or marketed outside Russia, the pharmacodynamic, pharmacokinetic, and toxicologic data generated over two decades of investigation constitute a substantial body of preclinical and early-phase clinical evidence.

The formulation is named "piyavit," a portmanteau of piyavka (Russian for "leech") and vita (Latin for "life"). It was produced under Baskova's patent (1992) by LLC "GirudIN" in Balakovo, Saratov Oblast, Russia. Piyavit was approved for medical use in 1994 by the Russian Ministry of Health and Medical Industry (registration No. 94/302/6, re-registered in 2001; No. 211-6940-6). The approved indications were limited to treatment and prevention of superficial vein thrombophlebitis and diabetic micro- and macroangiopathies as part of comprehensive therapy.

This page presents the complete preclinical pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, toxicology, and clinical data for piyavit as documented in the peer-reviewed literature. All experimental data and quantitative results are reproduced from the original published sources. No attempt has been made to re-analyze or reinterpret the primary data beyond what the original investigators reported. These data suggest potential for development of standardized leech-based nutraceuticals, pending FDA pathway determination.

Development History and Rationale

The salivary gland secretion (SGS) of Hirudo medicinalis is a multicomponent composite of natural hemostasis regulators. A natural question arose: could SGS be harvested, preserved, and administered as a stand-alone pharmaceutical? Early efforts to collect and store isolated SGS proved unsuccessful — lyophilization and cold storage reduced the activity of the secretion substantially (Baskova, 1992). This loss of activity during conventional preservation methods prompted a fundamentally different approach: rather than isolating SGS alone, the entire leech body would serve as the source material.

Rationale 1: Whole-Body Proteinase Inhibitors

Proteinase inhibitors critical to the formulation's activity are distributed throughout the leech body, not confined to the salivary glands. Eglins and bdellins are secreted by the intestinal canal wall (Ascenzi et al., 1995). Seemuller et al. (1986) demonstrated that a single leech contains approximately 20 micrograms of eglin, concentrated in the blood lacunae, reproductive organs, nephridia, and body mucus. Using the whole organism captures inhibitors lost in head-only extraction.

Rationale 2: Broadened Therapeutic Profile

The broad-spectrum biological activity of eglins and bdellins — notably their inhibition of neutrophil serine proteinases (elastase, cathepsin G) — complements the hemostasis-focused activity of SGS itself. This adds anti-inflammatory capacity that extends beyond anticoagulation, broadening the therapeutic profile of the final formulation to encompass inflammatory, immune, and tissue-protective properties.

Rationale 3: Natural GI Protection

The endogenous proteinase inhibitors from the leech body serve a critical formulation role: they protect the biologically active substances from degradation by gastrointestinal proteinases during oral delivery. This approach of enriching the formulation with its own natural proteinase inhibitors offers an elegant alternative to synthetic enteric coatings (Baskova, 1986).

Oral Delivery Mechanism

Baskova (1986) proposed that SGS has a liposomal structure. The lipid envelope serves dual protective and delivery functions: (1) the liposomal membrane shields enclosed proteins from gastrointestinal enzymes (protection from proteolysis), and (2) the liposomal particles cross the intestinal wall through pinocytic uptake, delivering protein cargo intact into the systemic circulation (intestinal absorption via pinocytosis). Extensive animal experiments confirmed that SGS retained biological activity following oral administration. The dried leech powder retains the activity characteristic of SGS for several years when stored at +4°C.

Distinction from Hirudotherapy

A fundamental distinction must be drawn between the mechanism of action of piyavit and the mechanism of action of SGS delivered during hirudotherapy. This distinction has important implications for clinical interpretation. Therapeutic effects observed during hirudotherapy cannot be assumed to predict the effects of oral piyavit, and vice versa. The two modalities should be evaluated independently on the basis of their respective preclinical and clinical evidence.

Hirudotherapy (Live Leech Application)

  • Local delivery: SGS injected directly into the microcirculatory bed at a defined anatomic site, achieving high local concentrations of bioactive compounds in target tissue
  • Reflex arc activation: Bite triggers cutaneous sensory nerve endings with potential systemic neurogenic effects
  • Mechanical component: Tissue injury produces local inflammation and sustained bleeding persisting for hours due to anticoagulant and anti-hemostatic SGS components
  • Three simultaneous pharmacologically significant events: Local injection + reflex arc + mechanical trauma/bleeding

Oral Piyavit (Systemic Administration)

  • Systemic distribution: Components enter circulation from intestine, distributed throughout body at concentrations determined by oral bioavailability, volume of distribution, and clearance kinetics
  • No reflex component: Absence of cutaneous bite and neurogenic reflex arc
  • No local delivery: Effects on target organ systems mediated through systemic blood levels rather than local tissue concentrations
  • No sustained bleeding effect: Absence of the mechanical blood extraction component

Clinical Interpretation

Oral piyavit and live-leech application represent pharmacologically distinct interventions, even though both originate from the same biological source. The absence of the reflex component, the local delivery mechanism, and the sustained bleeding effect means that results from one modality cannot be extrapolated to predict the other. Each must be evaluated on the basis of its own evidence.

Composition, Standardization, and Quality Control

Piyavit is prepared from whole lyophilized Hirudo medicinalis. The dried leech powder retains the principal biologically active components of SGS — including hirudin, eglins, bdellins, destabilase, and prostanoids — as well as proteinase inhibitors from the intestinal canal and body tissues. The lyophilization process preserves protein structure and function while removing water, creating a stable solid matrix that resists degradation at refrigerator temperatures for multiple years.

Enterprise Pharmacopoeial Quality Control Tests

TestMethodPurpose
Anticoagulant activityThromboelastography: prolongation of "r" parameter (time to formation of factor Xa and thrombin) and "k" parameter (time to fibrin clot formation)Batch-to-batch consistency of anticoagulant potency
Antitryptic activityPercent inhibition of trypsin caseinolytic activityProteinase inhibitor potency (eglin/bdellin content)
Antichymotryptic activityPercent inhibition of alpha-chymotrypsin caseinolytic activityEglin-class inhibitor content confirmation

Proteinase Inhibition Profile (at 5.6 mg/mL protein concentration)

Target EnzymeInhibitionSource
Trypsin (caseinolytic activity)78.1%Baskova, 1986
Subtilisin (caseinolytic activity)66.7 ± 9.0%Baskova, 1986
Alpha-chymotrypsin (caseinolytic activity)27.0 ± 6.3%Baskova, 1986
Factor XIIa (amidolytic activity)Dose-dependentBaskova, 1986
Plasma kallikrein (amidolytic activity)Dose-dependentBaskova, 1986
Human granulocyte elastase (amidolytic activity, at 11.5 mg/mL)71.2%Baskova, 1986

The formulation also retains the antithrombin activity of hirudin. At a protein concentration of 0.8 mg/mL in physiological saline, piyavit doubles the fibrinogen clotting time by thrombin from 30 seconds (control) to 60-70 seconds (Baskova, 1986). The anti-inflammatory implications of elastase and cathepsin G inhibition are significant: neutrophil serine proteinases play a central role in tissue destruction during acute and chronic inflammatory processes, including arthritis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and diabetic vascular complications.

Pharmacodynamic Profile: Ten Established Properties

The pharmacodynamic profile of piyavit encompasses multiple activities, reflecting the multicomponent nature of the preparation. These properties have been established through in vitro experimentation and animal studies conducted over approximately 15 years (1986-2001). The polyfunctionality of piyavit — attributable to its multicomponent composition — was considered its principal advantage. The original clinical investigators noted that hemostatic changes of similar magnitude typically require concurrent use of multiple conventional agents (anticoagulants, antiplatelet drugs, phlebotropic agents, anti-inflammatory agents), each carrying its own side effect profile and dosing complexity.

1. Anticoagulant Activity

Acts on both platelet-vascular and plasma components of hemostasis. Blockade of plasma kallikrein, inhibition of factor XIIa, calcium ion chelation, and hirudin-mediated antithrombin activity. Doubles fibrinogen clotting time at 0.8 mg/mL.

2. Slow Thrombolytic Effect

Dissolves preformed thrombi over days. Seven-dose administration achieved complete dissolution. Single oral dose: 67% lysis at day 7 (vs 40% spontaneous). No bleeding at thrombolytically effective doses.

3. Hemorheologic Improvement

Inhibits platelet and erythrocyte aggregation; decreases blood viscosity. Platelet aggregation amplitude reduced 6-fold at 0.01 mg/mL (p=0.002). No spontaneous platelet activation (unlike heparin).

4. Absence of Hemorrhagic Risk

Does not cause bleeding at doses that block thrombus formation. No hemorrhagic events in any preclinical or clinical study. Distinguishes piyavit from conventional fibrinolytics (streptokinase, alteplase: 0.5-1.0% ICH rate).

5. Immunomodulatory Activity

Enhances T-cell DTH (p<0.02 CBA, p<0.05 BALB/c). Suppresses B-cell RFC counts (p<0.01). Antiproliferative activity up to 80% inhibition. TNF reduced 50%, IL-2 reduced 17%. Potentiates methylprednisolone and cyclosporine.

6. Proteinase Inhibition

Blocks trypsin (78.1%), subtilisin (66.7%), chymotrypsin (27.0%), neutrophil elastase (71.2%), factor XIIa, plasma kallikrein, and cathepsin G. Derives primarily from eglins and bdellins retained from whole-organism extraction.

7. Neurotrophic Activity

Stimulates neurite outgrowth in chick embryo spinal ganglia. Area index increased 35 ± 7% (p<0.05) at 200 ng/mL — 3-4 orders of magnitude below anticoagulant concentration. Confirmed BBB penetration.

8. Analgesic Effect

Intranasal administration: tail-flick latency prolonged 59% (p<0.02) to 104%. Heat inactivation abolishes analgesia but unmasks hyperalgesia from kinins. Candidate mediators: enkephalin-like neuropeptides (Zipser, 1980).

9. Hypotensive Effect

Reduces BP in SHR strain rats. IV/IP SGS: to 129 mmHg on day 1, ~140 mmHg on day 5. Oral piyavit: to 135 mmHg on day 1. Mediated by proteins >500 Da (LMW fraction inactive).

10. Oxygen-Protective Effect

Extreme hypobaric hypoxia (12,000 m): IP survival 57% vs 14% control (p<0.05). Mean survival 435s vs 160-170s (2.4-2.6x increase). LMW fraction (<2,000 Da) alone: 2.8x survival increase.

Preclinical Evidence: Blood Rheology and Platelet Aggregation

Kameneva et al. (1988, 1995) conducted comparative experiments evaluating piyavit extract versus unfractionated heparin as blood stabilizers. In these experiments, 1 mL of blood was stabilized with either 5 U of unfractionated heparin or 5-6 mg of protein from aqueous piyavit extract (ratio 1:9).

Blood Viscosity and Aggregation: Piyavit vs. Heparin

Blood SourceStabilizerViscosity (Low Shear)Viscosity (High Shear)EA (s)EMR (s)
Rat (Hct 44.0 ± 1.0, n=16-17)Heparin4.3 ± 0.4 mPa·s10.2 ± 0.634.0 ± 8.1224 ± 18
Piyavit3.6 ± 0.28.8 ± 0.544.0 ± 7.2233 ± 18
Human, CAD (Hct 48.0 ± 1.5, n=8-10)Heparin7.9 ± 1.217.4 ± 1.26.9 ± 1.3265 ± 18
Piyavit6.7 ± 0.514.3 ± 1.5 (p<0.1)9.3 ± 1.7273 ± 22

EA = erythrocyte aggregation; EMR = erythrocyte mechanical resistance; Hct = hematocrit; CAD = coronary artery disease. Source: Kameneva et al., 1988.

Platelet Safety Signal

A clinically relevant observation from CAD patient samples: spontaneous platelet aggregation occurred in 5 of 8 platelet-rich plasma samples stabilized with heparin, consistent with published reports of heparin-induced platelet aggregation. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) occurs in 1-5% of patients receiving unfractionated heparin and can trigger life-threatening thrombosis. In contrast, spontaneous platelet aggregation was not observed in any sample of the same blood stabilized with piyavit (Kameneva et al., 1995).

In a separate series, Baskova et al. (1995) demonstrated inhibition of platelet aggregation in platelet-rich rat plasma by piyavit extract. At a protein concentration of 0.01 mg/mL: maximum aggregation amplitude decreased nearly 6-fold (from 17.73 ± 12.31 Ohm to 3.43 ± 0.97 Ohm; n=6; p=0.002), aggregation rate decreased more than 3-fold (from 21.75 ± 19.6 Ohm/min to 6.22 ± 1.68 Ohm/min; p=0.038), while lag period duration did not differ from control.

Preclinical Evidence: Antithrombotic and Thrombolytic Activity

The antithrombotic and thrombolytic properties of piyavit have been established through three complementary experimental models: a prethrombotic state model demonstrating state-dependent activity, the laser-induced arteriolar thrombosis model (performed at the University of Bordeaux, France) confirming protection with high statistical significance (p<0.0001), and the Wessler model of jugular vein thrombosis demonstrating dose-dependent thrombolysis without hemorrhage.

Preclinical Antithrombotic Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Baskova et al.
1995
Animal experiment (laser-induced arteriolar thrombosis)Rat mesenteric arterioles; laser-induced thrombosis model (performed at Hematology Laboratory, University of Bordeaux, France)
(n=NR)
Oral piyavit suspension: 50 mg in 0.8 mL physiological saline per 200 g rat, administered 4 hours before laser exposure. Three endpoints measured: number of laser impacts to induce thrombus, number of emboli, embolization timeProtection against laser-induced platelet thrombus formationStatistically significant antithrombotic effects on all three endpoints (p<0.0001 for number of laser impacts). Increased number of laser impacts required to damage endothelium. Decreased number of emboli. Reduced embolization time
Subcutaneous injection of concentrated aqueous extract (PEconc), 1600-fold dilution (PE1/1600), and lipid-soluble fraction (PgLfr) all provided protection at 20, 40, and 60 minutes post-injection. Most pronounced effect from concentrated aqueous extract. Prostacyclin analogs (detectable as 6-keto-PgF1alpha) provide mechanistic link
Baskova et al.
1995
Animal experiment (Wessler jugular vein thrombosis model)Rats with 24-hour mature jugular vein thrombi. Single IV (n=15) and single oral (n=15) piyavit extract at 57 mg/mL protein concentration
(n=30)
1 mL piyavit extract IV or intragastrically. Thrombus assessed at days 3, 5, and 7 by visual recanalization and dried thrombus weightThrombus lysis rate at day 7Day 7: Control (saline) — spontaneous lysis in 40%. Single oral dose — thrombus lysis in 67%. Single IV dose — thrombus lysis in 78%. Neither single nor repeated administration caused bleeding in any animal
Repeated oral dosing substantially more effective: 7-dose administration resulted in complete thrombus dissolution. Maximal effect with 3 doses of 1 mL suspension containing 30 mg piyavit (Baranova et al., 1997). Absence of hemorrhagic side effects at thrombolytically effective doses distinguishes piyavit from streptokinase, urokinase, and alteplase (0.5-1.0% intracerebral hemorrhage risk)
Baskova
1986
Animal experiment (prethrombotic state model)Rats with prethrombotic state induced by IV injection of 0.3 mL human blood serum
(n=NR)
Oral piyavit suspension (1 mL, 10 mg) administered 60 minutes before serum challenge vs controlsPlasma recalcification time, partial thromboplastin time, platelet countPiyavit-pretreated rats: attenuated hypercoagulable changes (shortened recalcification time, shortened PTT, platelet count drop) through inhibition of platelet aggregation and blockade of intrinsic coagulation pathway. In healthy rats: single dose produced no significant effect on hemostasis at 60 and 120 minutes — confirming activity is specific to pathologic activation
Critical distinction: piyavit exerts measurable anticoagulant effect specifically in pathologic hemostatic activation while not disturbing normal hemostasis in healthy animals. This state-dependent activity is a desirable safety characteristic for any antithrombotic agent

Critical Safety Observation: Thrombolysis Without Hemorrhage

Neither single nor repeated piyavit administration caused bleeding in any experimental animal across all thrombolysis studies. The general condition of treated animals was indistinguishable from controls. This absence of hemorrhagic side effects at thrombolytically effective doses distinguishes piyavit from conventional fibrinolytic agents — streptokinase, urokinase, and tissue plasminogen activator (alteplase) — all of which carry substantial hemorrhagic risk, including a 0.5-1.0% rate of intracerebral hemorrhage in clinical use. The mechanism may relate to the simultaneous presence of anticoagulant, antiplatelet, and profibrinolytic components in a balanced ratio, promoting clot dissolution without disrupting global hemostasis.

Subcutaneous Preparations Tested in Laser Thrombosis Model

PreparationDescriptionFCT with ThrombinRecalcification Time6-keto-PgF1α
PEconcConcentrated aqueous extractndnd80 ng-equiv/mL
PE1/1010-fold diluted extract36 ± 2 s (ctrl: 24 ± 2)188 ± 3 s (ctrl: 120 ± 2)nd
PE1/16001600-fold diluted extractndnd50 pg-equiv/mL
PgLfrLipid-soluble fractionndnd22.5 ng-equiv/mL

FCT = fibrinogen clotting time; nd = not determined. Source: Baskova et al., 1995.

The presence of prostacyclin analogs (detectable as 6-keto-PgF1α by enzyme immunoassay) provides a mechanistic link: inhibition of arterial thrombus formation is mediated at least in part by prostacyclin-like substances that block platelet aggregation. Prostaglandins were previously demonstrated in both the SGS and the body of the leech (Baskova & Nikonov, 1987), reinforcing the rationale for whole-organism rather than head-only extraction.

Preclinical Evidence: Anti-Atherosclerotic Effects

The anti-atherosclerotic potential of piyavit was evaluated in a 5-month chronic dosing study in rats maintained on an atherogenic diet (Baskova et al., 1989; Bazazyan, 1982).

Anti-Atherosclerotic Study Data
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Baskova et al.
1989
Animal experiment (5-month chronic dosing study)Rats on atherogenic diet. Group 1: atherogenic diet + saline (n=8). Group 2: atherogenic diet + piyavit (n=4). Group 3: standard diet + piyavit (n=8)
(n=20)
Daily oral (intragastric) administration of 5 mg piyavit suspension in 1 mL physiological saline for 5 monthsThoracic and abdominal aorta intimal edema, desquamation, argyrophilic cells, craters, plasma triglyceridesAtherogenic diet + saline: thoracic aorta edema 8.0 +/- 0.34%, abdominal 5.5 +/- 3.4%, intimal edema in 7/8 rats. Atherogenic diet + piyavit: thoracic edema 0%, abdominal 0.1 +/- 0.1%, only 1/4 animals with minor swelling (abdominal only). Triglycerides not reduced by chronic piyavit (360 vs 365 mg/mL). Short-term (8-day) atherogenic loading: piyavit reduced triglycerides to 45.5 +/- 21.3 vs 75.5 +/- 4.5 mg/mL in controls
Near-complete prevention of intimal edema (earliest pathologic event in atherosclerosis) suggests piyavit components stabilize endothelial barrier function. Mechanism likely involves prostacyclin analogs and anti-inflammatory proteinase inhibitors (eglins, bdellins). Endothelial protection precedes monocyte infiltration, foam cell formation, and plaque development

Endothelial Protection: Detailed Outcomes

ParameterAtherogenic + Saline (n=8)Atherogenic + Piyavit (n=4)Standard Diet + Piyavit (n=8)
Thoracic aorta edema area (%)8.0 ± 0.3400
Abdominal aorta edema area (%)5.5 ± 3.40.1 ± 0.10
Desquamation, abdominal aorta (%)0.34 ± 0.2900
Craters/mm² (thoracic)1.2 ± 0.900
Craters/mm² (abdominal)1.0 ± 0.50.6 ± 0.30.1 ± 0.1
Plasma triglycerides (mg/mL)365 ± 61360 ± 5677 ± 17

Source: Baskova et al., 1989.

Endothelial Protection

The near-complete prevention of intimal edema — the earliest pathologic event in atherosclerosis, preceding monocyte infiltration, foam cell formation, and plaque development — in the piyavit-treated group on atherogenic diet (0% thoracic edema vs. 8.0% in controls; 0.1% abdominal edema vs. 5.5% in controls) suggests that piyavit components stabilize endothelial barrier function. The mechanism likely involves prostacyclin analogs and anti-inflammatory proteinase inhibitors (eglins, bdellins) that prevent neutrophil-mediated endothelial damage. Intimal edema in 7 of 8 control rats vs. 1 of 4 treated rats (abdominal aorta only) confirms the protective effect.

Preclinical Evidence: Immunomodulatory Activity

The immunologic effects of piyavit were characterized in three experimental systems: in vivo animal studies using standardized immunotoxicologic methods, blood cell culture experiments (MT4 lymphoblastoid cells and human PBMC), and neutrophil phagocytosis assays. The net immunologic profile — T-cell stimulation combined with B-cell suppression — qualifies as immunomodulatory rather than purely immunosuppressive or immunostimulatory.

Immunomodulatory Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Kudrina & Gnevkovskaya
1992
Animal experiment (immunotoxicologic evaluation)CBA and BALB/c mice (n=10 per group). Laboratory of Immunotoxicology, All-Union Scientific Center for Safety of BAS (Kupavna)
(n=NR)
Oral piyavit at 0.1% and 1.0% suspension, administered 24 or 48 hours before immunization with sheep red blood cells (SRBC)Delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reaction (mm), rosette-forming cells (RFC), antibody-forming cells (AFC), hemagglutinin titerT-cell: 1.0% piyavit 48h pre-immunization significantly enhanced DTH in both CBA (0.29 +/- 0.03 vs 0.19 +/- 0.02 mm; p<0.02) and BALB/c (0.43 +/- 0.04 vs 0.28 +/- 0.04 mm; p<0.05). B-cell: RFC significantly reduced (oral 1%: 28.3 +/- 2.3 vs 42.7 +/- 3.8 per 10^6 cells, p<0.01; IM 1:25: 25.3 +/- 1.4, p<0.001). AFC counts and hemagglutinin titers not significantly altered
Net immunologic profile: T-cell stimulation combined with B-cell suppression qualifies as immunomodulatory rather than purely immunosuppressive or immunostimulatory. This dual modulation is consistent with the formulation acting on multiple immune regulatory pathways simultaneously
Baranova & Kalashnikova
1998
In vitro cell cultureMT4 lymphoblastoid cell line and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) stimulated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA)
(n=NR)
Aqueous piyavit extract at protein concentrations of 100-500 mcg/mL. Proliferative activity assessed by 3H-thymidine incorporationAntiproliferative activity, TNF production, IL-2 production, cytotoxicity, reversibility with exogenous IL-2, steroid/cyclosporine potentiationPronounced antiproliferative activity at 100-500 mcg/mL. Maximal inhibition reaching 80%. TNF production reduced by 50%. IL-2 production reduced by 17%. No cytotoxicity detected. Exogenous IL-2 reversed immunosuppressive effect. Piyavit and eglin c increased PBMC sensitivity to suboptimal methylprednisolone (10^-8 M) and cyclosporine (0.15 ng/mL)
Steroid-potentiating effect: leech-derived proteinase inhibitors may serve as adjuncts to reduce required doses of immunosuppressive drugs in transplant medicine and autoimmune disease. Glucocorticoid toxicity (osteoporosis, diabetes, hypertension, cataracts, infection risk) is a major morbidity source in long-term immunosuppression. Concentration-dependent potentiation suggests pharmacologically specific interaction
Baskova et al.
1988
In vitro neutrophil assayHuman neutrophils (n=11 control, n=25 extract, n=14 dialysate)
(n=50)
Piyavit extract (protein 12 mg/mL) and extract dialysate (protein 5 mg/mL) vs physiological saline controlPhagocytic index and phagocytosis rateExtract: phagocytic index 5.5 +/- 1.6 vs 2.9 +/- 0.8 control (p<0.001); phagocytosis rate 75.9 +/- 7.7% vs 54.2 +/- 10.8% (p<0.001). Dialysate: phagocytic index 6.2 +/- 2.2 (p<0.001); phagocytosis rate 79.5 +/- 4.6% (p<0.01). Dialysate showed greater enhancement than parent extract
Dialysate superiority likely due to removal of non-dialyzable impurities that mask phagocytic enhancement activity. Consistent with Shishkina (1953) observation of 2-3 fold phagocytic activity increase in hirudotherapy patients

DTH Response Data: T-Cell Stimulation

Mouse StrainPiyavit Conc.Positive Control (mm)24h Pre-immunization48h Pre-immunization
CBA (n=10)0.1%0.21 ± 0.020.25 ± 0.030.23 ± 0.04
CBA (n=10)1.0%0.19 ± 0.020.23 ± 0.020.29 ± 0.03 (p<0.02)
BALB/c (n=10)0.1%0.28 ± 0.040.33 ± 0.020.28 ± 0.03
BALB/c (n=10)1.0%0.28 ± 0.040.28 ± 0.030.43 ± 0.04 (p<0.05)

Source: Kudrina & Gnevkovskaya, 1992.

Steroid-Potentiating Effect

Published research demonstrates that piyavit and eglin c increase the sensitivity of human PBMC to suboptimal concentrations of methylprednisolone (10-8 M) and cyclosporine (0.15 ng/mL), two established clinical immunosuppressants (Baranova et al., 1999; Kalashnikova et al., 1999). The concentration-dependent nature of this potentiation suggests a pharmacologically specific interaction. If this steroid-potentiating effect translates to the clinical setting, leech-derived proteinase inhibitors could potentially serve as adjuncts to reduce immunosuppressant doses in transplant medicine and autoimmune disease — addressing glucocorticoid toxicity (osteoporosis, diabetes, hypertension, cataracts) and cyclosporine nephrotoxicity.

Anticomplementary Activity

SGS demonstrates substantial anticomplementary activity via the classical pathway of complement activation, both with and without prior incubation. Activity is less pronounced via the alternative pathway. Both activities are dose-dependent (Baskova et al., 1988). A 67-kDa protein subsequently isolated from whole leech extracts inhibits the activity of C1s, a subcomponent of complement component C1 (Tikhonenko, 2000). The proposed biological function is protection of the leech's symbiotic microflora (Aeromonas spp.) from the lytic action of the host's complement system.

Preclinical Evidence: Neurotrophic, Analgesic, and Cognitive Effects

Three distinct CNS-related properties have been documented for piyavit: stimulation of neurite outgrowth, analgesic activity via intranasal delivery, and enhancement of conditioned reflex memory. All three are supported by the confirmed ability of piyavit components to cross the blood-brain barrier, as demonstrated by tritium-labeling studies showing brain radioactivity exceeding blood radioactivity at 3 hours post-administration.

Neurotrophic and CNS Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Chalisova et al.
1999
In vitro tissue cultureChick embryo spinal ganglia explants (n=30 experimental, n=23 control)
(n=53)
Piyavit extract at final protein concentration of 200 ng/mLNeurite-stimulating effect measured by area index of explantsArea index of experimental explants exceeded controls by 35 +/- 7% (p<0.05). Effective concentration remarkably low: 200 nanograms/mL — 3-4 orders of magnitude below concentrations required for anticoagulant or proteinase inhibitory effects
Chick embryo spinal ganglia is a well-validated model for neurotrophic factor activity (used for NGF and BDNF characterization). Confirmed BBB penetration (Section 18.4.1) establishes that systemically administered piyavit could deliver neuroactive compounds to CNS. The specific neurotrophic component is distinct from hirudin and proteinase inhibitors, given nanogram-level activity
Pragina et al.; Tushmalova et al.
1999
Animal experiment (passive avoidance paradigm)Rats tested for conditioned reflex memory using passive avoidance paradigm
(n=NR)
IP: 50 mg/kg body weight, 3 daily injections. Oral: 150 mg/kg, 3 daily dosesMemory trace retention measured by latency before entering dark compartmentIP administration: memory trace retention at 24h prolonged by 40 seconds vs controls. Oral administration: positive memory retention effect observed at both 24 hours and 5 days after last piyavit administration
Two proposed mechanisms: (1) SGS-mediated stimulation of DNA methylation in brain tissue (Vanyushin et al., 1974), and (2) neurotrophic factor activity analogous to BDNF. Both supported by confirmed BBB penetration of piyavit components
Khalil
1987
Animal experiment (tail-flick latency)Rats, intranasal administration. Dose 1: 6% aqueous suspension (n=7/group). Dose 2: concentrated extract (n=4/group). Heat-inactivated control (n=10)
(n=NR)
Intranasal piyavit extract (0.05 mL), thermal stimulation of tail tipTail-flick latency as measure of analgesic effectDose 1 (6% suspension): latency prolonged 59% at 15 min (p<0.02). Dose 2 (concentrated): latency increased 104% at 15 min (p<0.1), 78.5% at 30 min, 25% at 45 min, no difference by 50-60 min. Heated extract (100 C, 15 min): abolished analgesic activity but unmasked hyperalgesic effect — latency shortened 50% at 15 min
Hyperalgesia from heated extract attributed to heat-stable kinins. SGS itself lacks intrinsic analgesic activity (Baskova, Khalil, & Nikonov, 1987). Candidate mediators: neuropeptides with morphine-like activity; Zipser (1980) demonstrated enkephalin in leech nerve cells. Central mechanism of action supported by BBB penetration data

Neurotrophic Activity

  • Model: Chick embryo spinal ganglia (validated NGF/BDNF assay system)
  • Result: Area index +35 ± 7% (p<0.05)
  • Concentration: 200 ng/mL — remarkably low, 3-4 orders of magnitude below anticoagulant threshold
  • Implication: Neurotrophic component is distinct from hirudin and proteinase inhibitors

Analgesic Effect

  • Route: Intranasal (0.05 mL)
  • 6% suspension: +59% tail-flick latency (p<0.02)
  • Concentrated: +104% at 15 min, declining to +25% at 45 min
  • Candidate: Enkephalin-like neuropeptides (Zipser, 1980)

Memory Enhancement

  • Model: Passive avoidance paradigm in rats
  • IP (50 mg/kg x 3 days): +40 seconds memory trace retention at 24h
  • Oral (150 mg/kg x 3 days): Positive effect at both 24h and 5 days
  • Mechanisms: DNA methylation stimulation and/or BDNF-like activity

Preclinical Evidence: Hypotensive and Oxygen-Protective Effects

Hypotensive and Oxygen-protective Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Baskova & Nikonov
1990
Animal experimentSpontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR strain). IV: 0.3 mL SGS. IP: 0.3 mL SGS. Oral: 1 mL of 6% piyavit suspension. Blood pressure measured in tail vein
(n=NR)
Three routes of SGS/piyavit administration in SHR strain ratsBlood pressure reduction and duration of effectIV and IP SGS virtually equivalent: BP reduced to 129 mmHg on day 1, remaining approximately 140 mmHg on day 5. Oral piyavit less effective: BP decreased to 135 mmHg on day 1, returned to baseline by day 3. Hypotensive mechanism mediated by proteins/peptides >500 Da (LMW fraction <500 Da did not produce BP reduction)
SHR model hypertension driven by sympathoadrenal hyperactivity. Pathologic features include arteriolar network rarefaction and cell membrane structural-functional disruption. Sustained effect from IV/IP (5 days) vs shorter oral effect (3 days) likely reflects route-dependent pharmacokinetics
Trubin et al.
1992
Animal experiment (extreme hypobaric hypoxia)Rats exposed to hypobaric conditions simulating 12,000 m altitude within 1 minute in hypobaric chamber
(n=NR)
IP: 0.6 mL extract, 20 min before exposure. Oral: 1 mL suspension, 1 hour before exposure. LMW fraction (<2000 Da) tested separately via IP injectionSurvival rate after 4 min exposure, mean survival timeIP: 57% survival vs 14% control at 4 min (p<0.05); mean survival 435 s vs 160-170 s (2.4-2.6 fold increase); in some experiments 0.5 mL fresh extract prolonged survival to 1 hour. Oral: survival time prolonged 1.5-fold. LMW fraction alone (<2000 Da, IP): survival time increased 2.8-fold
Cytoprotective effect attributed to low-molecular-weight fraction (<2000 Da). The 2.8-fold survival increase from LMW fraction alone (exceeding whole extract effect) suggests this fraction contains the primary cytoprotective compound(s) and that higher-MW components may partially attenuate the effect

Hypotensive Effect in SHR Rats

  • IV/IP SGS: BP reduced to 129 mmHg on day 1, remaining at ~140 mmHg on day 5
  • Oral piyavit: BP decreased to 135 mmHg on day 1, returned to baseline by day 3
  • Mediated by proteins/peptides >500 Da (LMW fraction <500 Da did not produce BP reduction)
  • SHR model driven by sympathoadrenal hyperactivity with arteriolar network rarefaction

Oxygen-protective Effect at Extreme Altitude

  • Simulated 12,000 m altitude in hypobaric chamber (within 1 minute)
  • IP: 57% survival vs 14% control (p<0.05); mean survival 435s vs 160-170s
  • Fresh extract (0.5 mL, some experiments): survival prolonged to 1 hour
  • Oral: 1.5-fold survival increase
  • LMW fraction (<2,000 Da) alone: 2.8-fold survival increase — exceeding whole extract

Preclinical Evidence: Experimental Diabetes

The rationale for investigating piyavit in diabetes rests on two converging lines of evidence: (1) immunomodulatory properties relevant to the autoimmune pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes (Green & Warzee, 2002; Rosmalen et al., 2002), and (2) broad-spectrum proteinase inhibition relevant to vascular complications of diabetes.

Pathophysiologic Context

  • Diabetic patients have predisposition to thrombus formation from pathogenetic vascular changes (Stehouwer & Schaper, 1996)
  • Decreased activity of antithrombin III and C1-inhibitor due to methylglyoxal modification of arginine residues
  • Methylglyoxal in T1D: 470 nM (6-fold above normal 80 nM); in T2D: 290 nM (3-fold above normal) (Alexandrovski, 1992)
  • Neutrophil elastase elevated >30% due to neutrophil activation (Alexandrovsky, 1998)

Experimental Findings (Alloxan-Induced Diabetes, Baskova et al., 1995)

  • Reduced blood glucose levels
  • Increased insulin levels
  • Corrected pathologically elevated blood coagulation parameters
  • Concurrent decrease in cellular and humoral immunity parameters with trend toward improvement during supplementation
  • Restoration attributed to broad-spectrum proteinase inhibitors (elastase, kallikrein, factor XIIa inhibitors)

Pharmacokinetics

Because piyavit is a multicomponent formulation, classical single-analyte pharmacokinetics cannot be applied. Instead, Kotlova et al. (1999) used tritium (³H) labeling by the thermal activation method, distributing the radioactive label uniformly among the formulation's components.

Whole-Preparation Distribution

  • Tritium-labeled piyavit administered intragastrically to rats (90 microcuries)
  • Tritium detectable in muscle tissue
  • Penetrated blood-brain barrier
  • At 3 hours: brain radioactivity higher than blood radioactivity — indicating preferential accumulation or slower CNS clearance
  • Confirms intestinal absorption into systemic circulation

Eglin c (7,000 Da) Distribution

  • Maximum accumulation: kidneys
  • Heart, vena cava, aorta: 5-fold lower than kidneys
  • Lowest significant accumulation: brain tissue
  • IV half-life: 10 min (rodents), 2 hours (guinea pigs) (Ascenzi et al., 1995)

Hirudin Clearance

  • ~1 hour after IV infusion: up to 80% excreted in urine unchanged
  • Intact urinary excretion indicates minimal hepatic metabolism
  • Rapid renal clearance characteristic of small peptides

Pharmacokinetic Gap

The absence of complete pharmacokinetic characterization (Cmax, Tmax, AUC, terminal half-life) for the whole formulation or for individual components after oral dosing represents one of the most significant gaps in the piyavit research program. The rapid renal elimination of eglin c (half-life 10 minutes in rodents) contrasts sharply with sustained biological effects after oral administration — thrombolytic action requiring days, antihypertensive effect persisting for days. This discrepancy suggests either sustained-release oral absorption kinetics, longer half-lives for uncharacterized components, or triggering of endogenous cascades (prostacyclin release, complement modulation) that persist beyond parent compound elimination. Modern bioanalytical approaches (LC-MS/MS, ELISA, activity-based PK modeling) could address this gap.

Toxicology and Safety

The safety profile of piyavit has been characterized through acute toxicity studies, a 6-month chronic toxicity evaluation in two species, reproductive safety testing, and uterine contractility assessment. These studies were conducted primarily at the All-Union Scientific Center for Safety of Biologically Active Substances (Kupavna) under the direction of Berezovskaya.

Toxicology Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Baskova
1986
Acute toxicity studyWhite mice, intravenous administration at 3 dose levels
(n=NR)
IV doses: 235, 520, and 850 mg protein/100 g body weightMortality rate, LD50 determination235 mg/100g: 0% mortality. 520 mg/100g: 0% mortality. 850 mg/100g: 17% mortality. LD50 > 8.5 g/kg by IV route — exceptionally wide safety margin
For context: therapeutic oral dose in clinical studies was 300-900 mg/day in adult humans (approximately 4-13 mg/kg). The LD50/therapeutic dose ratio exceeds 650:1 by the IV route, which is more toxic than the oral route
Berezovskaya et al.
1988
Formal toxicity evaluation at All-Union Scientific Center for Safety of BAS (Kupavna)Rats and rabbits, IP and intragastric routes
(n=NR)
IP administration to rats and rabbits at 1,000 mg/kg. Intragastric administration at 5,000 mg/kg. 14-day observationIntoxication signs, mortalityIP at 1,000 mg/kg: no intoxication, no mortality during 14-day observation. Intragastric at 5,000 mg/kg: no intoxication, no mortality during 14-day observation
Oral dose of 5,000 mg/kg without toxicity represents approximately 350 g in a 70 kg human — roughly 400-fold the therapeutic dose. This exceptionally wide safety margin is consistent with the LD50 data and the absence of adverse events across all clinical studies
Berezovskaya et al.
1992
6-month chronic toxicity study in 2 speciesRats (intragastric suspension, once daily at 15, 75, 150 mg/kg) and rabbits (gelatin capsules, 5 days/week at 10, 50, 100 mg/kg with placebo controls)
(n=NR)
6 months daily dosing. Parameters: general condition, cardiovascular function, excretory function, liver function, nervous system function, pathomorphological organ analysisToxicity classification, organ effects, functional effectsClassified as non-toxic preparation. Confirmed anticoagulant and hypolipidemic effects at therapeutic and elevated doses. Mild diuretic effect at 1x and 5x doses. Potential inhibitory effect on hepatic microsomal oxidases (CYP450 enzyme inhibition). No significant effect on integral indicators, liver function, peripheral blood, cardiovascular system, nervous system, or mineral metabolism
The CYP450 inhibition finding has pharmacologic relevance for drug-drug interactions. Modern drug development would require formal CYP450 inhibition profiling (CYP1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 3A4) to characterize interaction potential with co-administered medications
Strizhova et al.
1992
Reproductive safety studyPregnant rats (n=30), second half of pregnancy. 4-week postnatal observation of offspring
(n=30)
Oral piyavit suspension (25 mg in 1 mL saline) during second half of pregnancyGeneral condition, pregnancy outcome, offspring developmentNo changes in general condition. No abortifacient or pregnancy-prolonging effects. No deviations from normal during 4-week postnatal observation. Physical development of pups indistinguishable from controls
Authors concluded piyavit may be used in treatment of complications of second half of pregnancy. Clinically relevant because thrombophilia is common in pregnancy and standard anticoagulants (heparin, LMWH) require parenteral administration. An oral anticoagulant with pregnancy safety profile would address unmet clinical need (formal teratogenicity and human safety data required before clinical use)

Acute Toxicity Summary

Route & DoseResult
IV 235 mg/100g0% mortality
IV 520 mg/100g0% mortality
IV 850 mg/100g17% mortality
IP 1,000 mg/kgNo intoxication, no mortality (14d)
Oral 5,000 mg/kgNo intoxication, no mortality (14d)

LD50 >8.5 g/kg IV. LD50/therapeutic dose ratio exceeds 650:1. Oral dose of 5,000 mg/kg (~350 g in 70 kg human) without toxicity represents ~400x the therapeutic dose.

6-Month Chronic Toxicity Summary

  • Classification: Non-toxic formulation
  • Rats: 15, 75, 150 mg/kg daily, intragastric
  • Rabbits: 10, 50, 100 mg/kg, capsules, 5 days/week
  • Confirmed anticoagulant and hypolipidemic effects
  • Mild diuretic effect at 1x and 5x doses
  • CYP450 inhibition: Potential inhibitory effect on hepatic microsomal oxidases — requires formal CYP profiling for drug interaction assessment
  • No significant effect on integral indicators, liver function, blood, cardiovascular, nervous system, or mineral metabolism

Reproductive and Uterine Safety

Uterine Contractility (Lapteva et al., 1992)

  • At 0.05 mg/mL: no significant changes in tone, amplitude, or frequency
  • At 0.1-1.0 mg/mL: frequency increased 50-100%, amplitude increased 10-50%
  • Changes reversed on washout
  • Effect classified as modulatory (not stimulatory) when compared with magnesium sulfate and oxytocin

Pregnancy Outcome (Strizhova et al., 1992)

  • Oral piyavit (25 mg in 1 mL saline) during second half of pregnancy (n=30)
  • No changes in general condition
  • No abortifacient or pregnancy-prolonging effects
  • 4-week postnatal observation: offspring development indistinguishable from controls
  • Clinically relevant: thrombophilia common in pregnancy; standard anticoagulants (heparin, LMWH) require parenteral administration

Clinical Evidence: Antithrombotic Applications

The transition from animal pharmacology to human clinical investigation occurred in Russian clinical centers during the 1990s. The studies reviewed in this section were not designed to contemporary FDA standards: they lacked randomization, blinding, and placebo controls. They were conducted in single centers with modest sample sizes. Yet the clinical data they generated are consistent with the preclinical pharmacology and merit documentation as a research foundation.

Clinical Antithrombotic Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Baskova et al.; Kameneva et al.
1997
Prospective uncontrolledGreat saphenous vein thrombophlebitis
(n=26)
Piyavit 300 mg (2 capsules) TID for 12-14 days. No additional pharmacotherapy; sole adjunctive measure was elastic compression of lower extremitiesClinical improvement (pain, edema, hyperemia resolution), vascular recanalization, hemostatic parameters, hemorheologic parametersFavorable dynamics of inflammatory process in 80% of patients: complete resolution of pain, edema, and hyperemia. Accelerated vascular recanalization. After 7 days: initial hypercoagulable state replaced by moderate hypocoagulation with prolonged thromboelastogram parameters, decreased fibrinogen, prolonged PT and aPTT, and increased plasmin levels
In patients with prior vena cava filter implantation, piyavit prevented thrombotic deposits from forming on the filter legs and at their attachment sites to the venous wall. Monotherapy with no additional anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents
Baskova et al.; Kameneva et al.
1997
Prospective uncontrolledAcute venous thrombosis in the iliofemoral segment
(n=17)
Piyavit 300 mg (2 capsules) TID for 12-14 days with elastic compressionPain and edema resolution, vascular recanalizationPain and edema resolved; accelerated recanalization observed, reducing risk of thrombosis recurrence
Clinical trial report signed by Academician V.S. Savelyev (department chair) and Principal Investigator M.D., D.Sc. Koshkin at Spasokukotsky Faculty Surgery Clinic, Moscow Medical University
Baskova et al.
1997
Controlled, non-randomizedPost-prosthetic heart valve replacement patients with acquired valvular heart disease
(n=42)
Treatment group (n=22): Piyavit 300 mg TID + phenindione 30 mg daily, initiated 2-3 days postoperatively, for 14-21 days. Control group (n=20): Phenindione 30 mg daily aloneFibrinogen levels, thrombin time, aPTT, prothrombin index, antithrombin III levels, fibrinolytic activity, platelet countPiyavit group: decreased fibrinogen, prolonged thrombin time, prolonged aPTT on postoperative days 3-4, decreased prothrombin index, increased antithrombin III, restored or increased fibrinolytic activity, no decrease in platelet count. Control group: hypercoagulation gradually intensified through postoperative day 14. Progressive hypocoagulation vs. progressive hypercoagulation
Clinical trial report signed by Prof. Kaidash (Head, Cardiac Surgery Dept, Vishnevsky Institute of Surgery). Investigators concluded piyavit could potentially replace salicylates and other antiplatelet agents as combination therapy with indirect anticoagulants in patients at elevated thrombotic risk (atrial fibrillation, prior thromboses/embolisms, cardiomegaly, valvular calcification)
Magomedov & Magomedova
2001
Retrospective cohort (5 years)Surgical and obstetric patients at risk for VTE, including emergency abdominal surgery and operations for bleeding gastric/duodenal ulcers
(n=150)
Piyavit at individually adjusted doses, prophylaxis duration 3-12 daysDeaths from postoperative DVT, pulmonary thromboembolism, and obstetric PEZero deaths from postoperative DVT complications. Zero deaths from postoperative pulmonary embolism. Zero fatalities from PE in pregnant women before or after cesarean section over 5-year observation period
Absence of formal control group limits interpretability, but zero-event rate across >150 patients over 5 years is noteworthy for a high-risk surgical population. Largest clinical dataset for piyavit VTE prophylaxis
Magomedov
1993
Prospective uncontrolledUlcers and purulent-inflammatory diseases of lower extremities complicated by lymphothrombosis and thrombolymphangitis of collector lymphatic vessels
(n=36)
Piyavit 300 mg (2 capsules) TID for 10-12 days, plus antibiotics. Lymph coagulation assessed at days 1, 3, 5, 7 via retrograde catheterization of functioning medial collector vessel on thighEdema resolution, lymph coagulation parameters, ulcer healing, lymphographic findingsBy day 7: edema completely resolved in 88% of patients; reduced by 85% in 28%. Days 3-7: ulcers cleansed of purulent-necrotic material with active granulation and marginal epithelialization. By day 7: lymph clotting time prolonged 1.5-fold; prothrombin index decreased 12%. Days 10-12: prolonged thromboelastogram parameters, elevated antithrombin III, increased plasmin activity
Lymphographic findings at days 7-10: no evidence of thrombolymphangitis in 4%; lymphatic varicosity with increased vessel diameter in 7%; complete obliteration within ulcer boundary in 6%; reduced valve numbers in 3%. Authors postulated possible lymphatic vessel remodeling

Hemorheologic Comparison: Piyavit vs. Phenindione

A direct comparison of hemorheologic effects in patients with great saphenous vein thrombophlebitis demonstrated more pronounced improvements in blood viscosity and ESR in the piyavit group after 7 days compared with the phenindione group after 14 days (Kameneva et al., 1995).

ParameterPiyavit Before (n=38)Piyavit After 7 DaysPhenindione Before (n=32)Phenindione After 14 Days
Blood viscosity at shear rate 9 s⁻¹ (mPa·s)7.72 ± 0.725.50 ± 0.478.13 ± 0.597.91 ± 0.74
Blood viscosity at shear rate 105 s⁻¹ (mPa·s)4.42 ± 0.193.99 ± 0.194.91 ± 0.214.80 ± 0.16
ESR (mm/h) at Hct=27%65.0 ± 1.451.1 ± 5.659.0 ± 2.062.0 ± 2.2
Hematocrit (%)43.6 ± 1.442.4 ± 1.841.5 ± 1.943.0 ± 2.2

Dose: Piyavit 300 mg TID; Phenindione 15 mg TID. Source: Kameneva et al., 1995.

Investigator Conclusion (Academician Savelyev)

The clinical trial report, signed by Academician V.S. Savelyev (department chair) and Principal Investigator M.D., D.Sc. Koshkin, stated: "In routine clinical practice, hemostatic changes of this magnitude are achieved only through the concurrent use of a range of different agents (anticoagulants, antiplatelet drugs, phlebotropic agents, anti-inflammatory agents). This approach is commonly associated with difficulties in dose titration, the inability to sustain prolonged use due to the development of side effects, frequently occurring dysfunctions in other organ systems, and the presence of contraindications to one or another medication."

Post-Valve Replacement Thromboprophylaxis: Hemostatic Trajectory

In the controlled study of 42 patients undergoing prosthetic heart valve replacement (Baskova et al., 1997), the piyavit + phenindione group demonstrated a progressive hypocoagulable state while the control group (phenindione alone) exhibited hypercoagulation that gradually intensified through postoperative day 14. Specific hemostatic changes in the treatment group included decreased fibrinogen levels, prolonged thrombin time, prolonged aPTT on postoperative days 3-4, decreased prothrombin index, increased antithrombin III levels, and restored or increased fibrinolytic activity, with no decrease in platelet count from aggregation.

The clinical trial report, signed by Prof. Kaidash (Head, Cardiac Surgery Department, Vishnevsky Institute of Surgery), concluded that piyavit could potentially replace salicylates and other antiplatelet agents as combination therapy with indirect anticoagulants, and "given its pronounced effects on various components of the hemostatic system, the formulation could potentially be used as monotherapy in the postoperative period without other medications affecting blood coagulation. However, this question requires further study."

5-Year VTE Prophylaxis Experience

Magomedov and Magomedova (2001) reported 5 years of clinical experience with piyavit for prevention of DVT and pulmonary thromboembolism in more than 150 patients undergoing abdominal surgery, including emergency procedures and operations for bleeding gastric and duodenal ulcers. Over the entire observation period: zero deaths from postoperative DVT complications, zero deaths from postoperative pulmonary embolism, and zero fatalities from PE in pregnant women before or after cesarean section. While the absence of a formal control group limits interpretability, the zero-event rate across more than 150 patients over 5 years is noteworthy for a high-risk surgical population.

Clinical Evidence: Diabetes Mellitus and Diabetic Retinopathy

Diabetes Clinical Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Balabolkin et al.; Mikhailova et al.
1997
Prospective uncontrolledType 2 diabetes mellitus, age 46-67 years (10 on insulin + oral hypoglycemics, 9 on oral hypoglycemics alone)
(n=19)
Piyavit for 21 days: 10 patients received 300 mg BID (600 mg/day); remaining received 150 mg BID (300 mg/day)Hemostatic parameters (thromboelastogram, aPTT, prothrombin index), lipid profile (LDL, HDL), blood glucose, hypoglycemic drug dose requirementsMeasurable reductions in hemostatic parameters including improved thromboelastogram, prolonged aPTT, decreased prothrombin index. Trend toward lipid profile improvement. Oral hypoglycemic dose reduced from 5-6 tablets/day to 3-4 tablets/day. Insulin dose reduced from 60 units to 30 units (50% reduction)
The 50% insulin dose reduction suggests piyavit may potentiate antidiabetic therapy, possibly through improved microcirculation (enhanced insulin delivery to target tissues), direct carbohydrate metabolism effects, or anti-inflammatory modulation of insulin resistance
Balabolkin et al.
1997
Prospective uncontrolledType 1 diabetes mellitus, age 17-42 years
(n=6)
Piyavit 300 mg BID or TID for 21 daysHemostatic parameters, glucose controlFavorable trends in hemostatic parameters and glucose control consistent with type 2 diabetes cohort. Insulin dose reduced by approximately 50%
Sample size (n=6) precludes meaningful statistical analysis. Data consistent with type 2 diabetes results but requires larger confirmatory studies
Balabolkin et al.
1999
Prospective uncontrolledDiabetes mellitus with diabetic retinopathy stages I-III, age 24-67 years, disease duration >15 years. Stage I (nonproliferative): 5 patients; Stage II (preproliferative): 5 patients; Stage III (proliferative with hemophthalmos): 6 patients
(n=16)
Piyavit 900 mg daily (2 capsules TID) for 3 weeksHemorrhage resolution, visual acuity, disease progression at 6-month follow-upStage I: hemorrhages virtually disappeared. Stage II: substantial decrease in hemorrhages and exudate. Stage III (partial hemophthalmos, n=4): complete resolution with decreased proliferation. Stage III (complete hemophthalmos, n=2): partial resolution enabling fundoscopic examination and retinal laser photocoagulation. Visual acuity improved by 0.1-0.4 diopters in 70% of cases. 6-month follow-up: stabilization and regression of DR process
No adverse effects observed. Rapid hemorrhage resolution is clinically significant because it prevents toxic effect of retained blood on retinal and vitreous tissues, and in 2 patients enabled subsequent laser photocoagulation that would otherwise have been impossible

Type 2 Diabetes: Drug Dose Reduction

  • Oral hypoglycemics: Daily requirement reduced from 5-6 tablets to 3-4 tablets
  • Insulin: Dose reduced from 60 units to 30 units — a 50% reduction
  • Hemostatic improvement: Thromboelastogram restored, aPTT prolonged, prothrombin index decreased
  • Lipid improvement: Trend toward improved LDL/HDL profile
  • Possible mechanisms: Improved microcirculation (enhanced drug delivery), direct metabolic effects, anti-inflammatory modulation of insulin resistance

Diabetic Retinopathy: Visual Outcomes

  • Stage I (nonproliferative, n=5): Hemorrhages virtually disappeared
  • Stage II (preproliferative, n=5): Substantial decrease in hemorrhages and exudate
  • Stage III partial hemophthalmos (n=4): Complete resorption; decreased proliferation
  • Stage III complete hemophthalmos (n=2): Partial resorption enabling fundoscopic exam and retinal laser photocoagulation
  • Visual acuity: Improved 0.1-0.4 diopters in 70% of cases
  • 6-month follow-up: Stabilization and regression of DR process

Clinical Significance of Hemorrhage Resorption

Rapid hemorrhage resolution from the vitreous body and retina not only improves visual acuity but also eliminates the toxic effect of retained blood on retinal and vitreous tissues. In 2 patients with complete hemophthalmos, partial resolution enabled subsequent retinal laser photocoagulation that would otherwise have been impossible. Spontaneous clearing may take weeks to months and risks permanent retinal damage (Balabolkin et al., 1999).

Clinical Evidence: Cerebrovascular Disease

Tanashyan et al. (1997) administered piyavit to three groups of 20 patients each, classified by severity of cerebrovascular disease. Groups II (chronic cerebrovascular disease) and III (initial manifestations of cerebral blood supply insufficiency) received piyavit as monotherapy. Group I (acute cerebrovascular accident) received piyavit in addition to standard therapy. Treatment duration was 14 days.

Cerebrovascular Disease Study
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Tanashyan et al.
1997
Prospective uncontrolledGroup I: Acute cerebrovascular accident (ACVA), n=20. Group II: Chronic cerebrovascular disease (CCVD), n=20. Group III: Initial manifestations of cerebral blood supply insufficiency (IMCBSI), n=20
(n=60)
14-day treatment. Groups I and II: 900 mg/day (2 capsules TID). Group III: 600 mg/day (2 capsules BID). Groups II and III received piyavit as monotherapy. Group I received piyavit + standard therapyPlatelet functional activity, blood viscosity, hemoglobin, fibrinolytic activity (euglobulin fraction, plasminogen activator content, soluble fibrin levels)Blood viscosity decreased in all three groups. Hemoglobin decreased in Groups II and III (possible hemodilution). Most significant changes in monotherapy groups (II and III): increased fibrinolytic activity of euglobulin fraction, increased plasminogen activator content, and changes in soluble fibrin levels. Group III showed trend toward decreased ADP-induced platelet aggregation
The improvement in fibrinolysis parameters with piyavit monotherapy is consistent with preclinical thrombolytic data and suggests plausible mechanism of clinical benefit. Hemorheological disturbances and hemostatic alterations are recognized contributors to ischemic cerebrovascular disease development and progression
GroupConditionDaily DoseRegimenMonotherapy?
I (n=20)Acute CVA (ACVA)900 mg2 capsules TIDNo (+ standard therapy)
II (n=20)Chronic CVD (CCVD)900 mg2 capsules TIDYes
III (n=20)Initial cerebral blood supply insufficiency (IMCBSI)600 mg2 capsules BIDYes

The most significant changes were observed in the monotherapy groups (II and III): increased fibrinolytic activity of the euglobulin fraction, increased plasminogen activator content, and changes in soluble fibrin levels. Blood viscosity decreased in all three groups. Hemoglobin decreased in Groups II and III, a possible hemodilution effect. Group III showed a trend toward decreased ADP-induced platelet aggregation.

Clinical Evidence: Pilot Studies and Case Reports

Two pilot investigations explored piyavit in conditions where its immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory properties provide a specific rationale: renal allograft delayed recovery (where immunosuppression, antithrombotic action, and anti-inflammatory effects converge) and cystic fibrosis (where neutrophil elastase inhibition addresses the primary mechanism of pulmonary destruction).

Pilot Studies and Case Reports
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Baranova et al.
1998
Pilot studyRenal allograft recipients with delayed recovery of renal function in early post-transplantation period
(n=NR)
Oral piyavit (dose and duration not specified)Creatinine levels, diuresis restorationReduced elevated creatinine levels and restored diuresis. In January 1998, the State Pharmacological Committee of Russia authorized clinical trials of piyavit as an agent for reducing thrombotic risk in allograft recipients
Rationale: combination of immunosuppressive activity, antithrombotic/thrombolytic action, and anti-inflammatory properties. Conducted at Institute of Transplantology and Artificial Organs. Supported by in vitro data showing piyavit increases PBMC sensitivity to suboptimal methylprednisolone and cyclosporine concentrations
Kalashnikova, Baranova, Baskova et al.
1999
Case reportPediatric patients with cystic fibrosis
(n=2)
Prolonged oral piyavit treatment (2 and 3 months)Tolerability, peripheral blood lymphocyte proliferative response, lymphocyte sensitivity to glucocorticoids, sputum neutrophil elastase activityGood tolerability over 2-3 months. Decreased proliferative response of peripheral blood lymphocytes to PHA. Increased lymphocyte sensitivity to glucocorticoids. Inhibition of rise in neutrophil elastase activity in sputum during inflammatory exacerbation
CF is characterized by elevated neutrophil elastase in sputum causing progressive pulmonary destruction. Piyavit contains inhibitors of elastase and cathepsin G — the enzymes responsible for pulmonary parenchymal destruction. Reduced sputum elastase activity is mechanistically consistent with proteinase inhibitory profile

Renal Transplantation (Baranova et al., 1998)

  • Reduced elevated creatinine levels and restored diuresis in patients with delayed recovery of renal function
  • January 1998: State Pharmacological Committee of Russia authorized clinical trials of piyavit for reducing thrombotic risk in allograft recipients
  • Rationale supported by in vitro data showing increased PBMC sensitivity to suboptimal methylprednisolone and cyclosporine concentrations

Cystic Fibrosis (Kalashnikova et al., 1999)

  • Two pediatric patients treated for 2 and 3 months respectively
  • Good tolerability over prolonged treatment
  • Decreased lymphocyte proliferative response to PHA
  • Increased lymphocyte sensitivity to glucocorticoids
  • Inhibition of rise in sputum neutrophil elastase during inflammatory exacerbation — mechanistically consistent with proteinase inhibitory profile

Complete Clinical Study Overview

The following table summarizes all published clinical studies conducted with oral piyavit capsules. Evidence levels are classified as: III = controlled, non-randomized; IV = prospective case series without controls; V = case reports/pilot data.

StudyConditionnDoseDurationKey OutcomeLevel
Baskova et al., 1997Great saphenous vein thrombophlebitis26300 mg TID12-14 d80% clinical improvement; reduced viscosity

GRADE Evidence Level: Low

Observational studies or RCTs with serious limitations

Baskova et al., 1997Acute iliofemoral venous thrombosis17300 mg TID12-14 dPain/edema resolution; accelerated recanalization

GRADE Evidence Level: Low

Observational studies or RCTs with serious limitations

Baskova et al., 1997Post-valve replacement thromboprophylaxis42300 mg TID + phenindione14-21 dProgressive hypocoagulation vs hypercoagulation in controls

GRADE Evidence Level: Low

Observational studies or RCTs with serious limitations

Balabolkin et al., 1997; Mikhailova et al., 1999Type 2 DM19300 mg BID/TID21 dImproved hemostasis/lipids; reduced drug doses

GRADE Evidence Level: Very Low

Case reports, case series, or expert opinion only

Balabolkin et al., 1997Type 1 DM6300 mg BID/TID21 dInsulin dose reduced ~50%

GRADE Evidence Level: Very Low

Case reports, case series, or expert opinion only

Balabolkin et al., 1999Diabetic retinopathy (stages I-III)16300 mg TID21 dHemorrhage resolution; VA improved 0.1-0.4 in 70%

GRADE Evidence Level: Low

Observational studies or RCTs with serious limitations

Magomedov & Magomedova, 2001VTE prophylaxis (surgical/obstetric)>150Adjusted3-12 dZero deaths from PE or DVT over 5 years

GRADE Evidence Level: Low

Observational studies or RCTs with serious limitations

Magomedov, 1993Acute thrombolymphangitis36300 mg TID10-12 dEdema resolved in 88%; lymphographic improvement

GRADE Evidence Level: Low

Observational studies or RCTs with serious limitations

Tanashyan et al., 1997Cerebrovascular disease (3 subgroups)60600-900 mg/d14 dImproved fibrinolysis; decreased viscosity

GRADE Evidence Level: Low

Observational studies or RCTs with serious limitations

Baranova et al., 1998Renal allograft delayed recoveryOralReduced creatinine; restored diuresis

GRADE Evidence Level: Very Low

Case reports, case series, or expert opinion only

Kalashnikova et al., 1999Cystic fibrosis (pediatric)2Oral2-3 moReduced lymphocyte proliferation; inhibited sputum elastase rise

GRADE Evidence Level: Very Low

Case reports, case series, or expert opinion only

Safety Across All Clinical Studies

No serious adverse effects were reported in any clinical study. Specifically: no hemorrhagic events despite antithrombotic and thrombolytic activity; no drug interactions identified with phenindione, insulin, oral hypoglycemics, or standard cerebrovascular therapy; no organ toxicity on clinical monitoring; no treatment discontinuations due to adverse effects; and good tolerability reported in all studies, including prolonged use (up to 3 months in cystic fibrosis) and pediatric patients.

Limitations of the Clinical Evidence

Study Design Limitations

  • No randomization: The single controlled study (prosthetic valve, n=42) used non-randomized concurrent controls. All others were uncontrolled prospective case series
  • No blinding: Neither single nor double blinding employed in any study. Observer bias possible in outcome assessment
  • No placebo controls: Natural history of thrombophlebitis and diabetic retinopathy includes spontaneous improvement, making attribution impossible without controls

Additional Limitations

  • Small sample sizes: Range from n=2 to n=150. Most studies enrolled 16-43 patients. Adequate for large effects but insufficient by contemporary standards
  • Single-center, single-country: All studies at Russian institutions. No independent Western replication
  • Surrogate endpoints: Most outcomes were laboratory coagulation parameters, not patient-centered clinical endpoints (mortality, event rates, QoL)
  • Limited follow-up: 14-21 day treatment courses. Long-term durability largely unknown
  • No dose-response: Optimal dose, minimum effective dose, and dose-response relationship not established

Regulatory Status and Potential US Pathways

Piyavit is registered in Russia (Ministry of Health registration No. 94/302/6, re-registered 2001; No. 211-6940-6) for two indications: treatment and prevention of superficial vein thrombophlebitis, and diabetic micro- and macroangiopathies as part of comprehensive therapy. It is produced by LLC "GirudIN" in Balakovo, Saratov Oblast, Russia.

Regulatory Status

Piyavit is not approved by the FDA, is not available in the United States, and has never been submitted for regulatory review outside Russia. Quality control is governed by enterprise pharmacopoeial specifications (EPS) mandating batch-to-batch testing of anticoagulant activity (by thromboelastography) and proteinase inhibition (antitryptic and antichymotryptic activities). The data presented on this page are reported for their research value and do not constitute recommendations for clinical use.

Potential US Development Pathways

Pharmaceutical (IND/NDA)

  • Standardized whole-leech extract under Investigational New Drug application
  • FDA precedent for complex biological mixtures exists
  • Requirements: cGMP reformulation, FDA analytical characterization, GLP-compliant preclinical toxicology, Phase I-III clinical trials (randomized, controlled, blinded)

Biological Product (BLA)

  • Animal-source product with protein/peptide active constituents may be classified as a biological product
  • Requires Biologics License Application rather than NDA
  • Regulated under Public Health Service Act

Nutraceutical (DSHEA)

  • Lower-barrier pathway under Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (1994)
  • Permits structure/function claims: "supports healthy blood flow," "promotes normal coagulation"
  • Prohibits disease claims: "treats thrombophlebitis"
  • Requires FDA notification of claims within 30 days; no pre-market approval but safety evidence required

Regulatory Precedents: Animal-Derived Whole-Organism Pharmaceuticals

ProductSourceRegulatory Status
Thyroid extract (Armour Thyroid)Desiccated porcine thyroid glandUSP-standardized, FDA-approved
Pancreatic enzymes (Creon, Zenpep)Porcine pancreas-derived lipase/protease/amylaseFDA-approved under biologics pathway
HeparinPorcine intestinal mucosa glycosaminoglycanUSP-standardized, FDA-approved
Bee venom therapyWhole-venom formulationsNutraceutical market presence (apitherapy)

The regulatory precedent for animal-derived, multicomponent biological formulations exists. The challenge for a piyavit-type product would be analytical standardization — demonstrating batch-to-batch consistency of a complex biological matrix to FDA standards. Modern analytical technologies (high-resolution mass spectrometry, proteomic profiling, functional bioassay panels) provide tools not available when piyavit was originally developed.

Dosage Forms and Future Formulations

At the time of original publication (2004), collaborative efforts with multiple Moscow medical institutions were underway to prepare documentation for additional piyavit dosage forms. The status of these development efforts beyond 2004 is not documented in available sources.

Piyavit Ointment

Topical application for local anti-inflammatory and antithrombotic effects

Rectal Suppositories

Systemic and local absorption; potential for hemorrhoidal and pelvic venous applications

Ophthalmic Drops

Direct application to ocular tissues; relevant to diabetic retinopathy findings

Hirudo 3X (Homeopathic)

Homeopathic granule formulation based on SGS, developed at suggestion of Seselkina, Ph.D.

Additionally, piyavit substance was used by some clinicians for preparation of extracts for iontophoresis applications, and served as a component in various cosmetic products.

Future Research Directions

FDA Development Pathway Requirements

  • Phase I: Dose-escalation in healthy volunteers under IND, with formal PK/PD characterization (Cmax, Tmax, AUC, half-life)
  • Phase II: Randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled proof-of-concept in superficial thrombophlebitis or postoperative VTE prophylaxis
  • Phase III: Confirmatory trials if Phase II warrants
  • CMC package: Chemistry, Manufacturing, and Controls meeting cGMP standards for a biological product

Suggested Development Priorities

  • 1. Standardized nutraceutical: Leveraging DSHEA framework with structure/function claims for cardiovascular health and normal blood flow
  • 2. Component-specific drugs: Isolating cytoprotective LMW fraction, analgesic neuropeptides, immunomodulatory eglin-like fraction for targeted development
  • 3. Combination therapy: Investigating steroid-potentiating effect as adjunct to reduce immunosuppressant doses in transplant medicine
  • 4. Bioanalytical methods: Validated assays for individual piyavit components to enable proper PK characterization

Most Promising Clinical Indications

  • Adjunctive thromboprophylaxis: Surgical VTE prophylaxis data (>150 patients, zero events, 5 years) represent the strongest clinical signal
  • Diabetic vascular complications: Hemostatic improvement + lipid improvement + microcirculation enhancement addresses multiple pathways
  • Diabetic retinopathy (adjunctive): Hemorrhage resolution data clinically meaningful; rapid resorption prevents irreversible retinal damage
  • Chronic cerebrovascular disease: Fibrinolysis enhancement with monotherapy suggests potential as long-term maintenance therapy

Modern Analytical Opportunities

  • Mass spectrometry: LC-MS/MS for peptide quantification and comprehensive compositional characterization
  • Proteomics and lipidomics: Full molecular profiling of batch-to-batch variability
  • Aquaculture standardization: Controlled leech farming to reduce biological variability in source material
  • Formulation science: Nano-encapsulation, enteric coatings, other delivery technologies to improve oral bioavailability
  • Quality-by-design manufacturing: Statistical process control and real-time release testing

The Case for Development

The piyavit research program established several proof-of-concept principles: (1) a multicomponent biological formulation can be standardized using functional assays rather than single-analyte chemical tests; (2) oral bioavailability of a protein-based biological is achievable through natural liposomal packaging; (3) the breadth of pharmacologic activity is maintained through lyophilization and capsule delivery; and (4) the safety margin is exceptionally wide (LD50 >8.5 g/kg IV; no mortality at 5 g/kg orally; no hemorrhage at thrombolytically effective doses; no reproductive toxicity). The gap between these findings and a marketable product is primarily one of manufacturing standardization, regulatory strategy, and contemporary clinical trial design — not a gap in the fundamental science.

Key Takeaways

Research Value

  • Whole-leech extract retains SGS activity after lyophilization, stable for years at +4°C — eliminating the major obstacle to pharmaceutical development
  • Oral bioavailability confirmed by tritium-labeling studies (intestinal absorption, systemic distribution, BBB penetration) and functional studies (thrombolysis, antihypertensive effect, memory enhancement)
  • Single oral formulation demonstrates 10 distinct pharmacologic activities — a breadth requiring multiple conventional drugs to replicate
  • Exceptional safety margin: LD50 >8.5 g/kg IV; no mortality at 5 g/kg orally; no bleeding at thrombolytic doses; no reproductive toxicity; 6-month chronic dosing without organ toxicity in two species
  • Thrombolysis without hemorrhage: complete dissolution with 7-dose protocol, no bleeding in any animal — a property not shared by streptokinase, urokinase, or alteplase
  • Clinical pharmacologic effects across 9 studies (>370 patients) are consistent with preclinical data, lending mechanistic plausibility

Critical Considerations

  • Not FDA-approved. Piyavit has never been submitted for regulatory review outside Russia. All data are presented for research interest only
  • Single-laboratory origin: majority of studies from Baskova's group or Russian collaborators; no independent Western replication
  • Small sample sizes (n=2 to n=150); no randomization, blinding, or placebo controls in any clinical study
  • Incomplete pharmacokinetics: classical PK parameters not determined for whole formulation or individual components after oral dosing
  • Toxicology studies not conducted under GLP standards recognized by FDA
  • Manufacturing standardization: current production methods may not meet cGMP requirements; batch-to-batch variability of whole-organism biological product presents inherent challenges
  • Potential CYP450 inhibition identified in chronic toxicity study requires formal drug interaction profiling

Related Resources

This website provides educational information and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Medicinal leech therapy carries clinically meaningful risks and should be performed only by qualified clinicians under institutionally approved protocols. FDA 510(k) clearance for medicinal leeches is limited to specific indications; investigational and off-label discussions are labeled accordingly. For patient-specific guidance, consult a qualified healthcare provider.