Title: LowMolecularWeight Heparin and Unfractionated Heparin
1Low-Molecular-Weight HeparinandUnfractionated
Heparin
2The Coagulation Cascade
- Central to the coagulation cascade is the
generation of thrombin (factor IIa) - thrombin is generated from prothrombin by the
action of activated factor X (Xa) - thrombin then acts on fibrinogen to generate
fibrin clot
3Coagulation Cascade
Intrinsic Pathway (surface contact)
Extrinsic Pathway (tissue factor)
XIIa
VIIa
XIa
Heparin / LMWH(AT-III dependent)
IXa
Hirudin/Hirulog(direct antithrombin)
Xa
aPTT
Thrombin (IIa)
PT
Thrombin-Fibrin Clot
Courtesy of VTI
4Heparin Inhibits Hemostasis
THROMBOSIS Collagen ? ? XIa Tissue Factor ? ?
IXa Platelet Clumping Thrombus
Formation Thrombus Growth
HEMOSTASIS Tissue Factor Collagen Platelet
Aggregation Platelet-rich Hemostatic Plug
HEP
Xa Fluid Thrombin
HEP HIR
5The Procoagulant State in Thrombolysis
Vascular Injury
Activation of Platelets And Coagulation
Amplification
Xa Thrombin (IIa)
6Low-molecular-weight heparin
- UH (mw 3k - 30k) is a heterogeneous mixture of
polysacchride chains (glycosaminoglycans) - LMWH (mw 5k) is obtained by alkaline degradation
of heparin benzyl ester - LMWH molecules are enriched with short chains
with higher anti-XaIIa ratio
7Mechanism of Action
- Both UH and LMWH exert their anticoagulation
activity by catalyzing antithrombin (AT or AT
III) - catalyzed AT is accelerated in its inactivation
of the coagulation enzymes thrombin (factor IIa)
and factor Xa. - prolongs aPTT
8Interaction of Heparin Co-Factors with Thrombin
AT is an effective antithrombin but HC II is a
very weak antithrombin
AT
There are two heparin-cofactors, Antithrombin
(AT) and Heparin Co-factor II (HC II).
HC II
- - - -
9Interaction of Heparin Co-Factors with Thrombin
Heparin has a higher affinity for AT than for HC
II and there is more AT in plasma than HC II
AT
HC II
- - - -
10Antithrombin and Free Thrombin
AT alone does not inactivate free-thrombin
Free Thrombin
AT
11Inactivation of Thrombin byHeparin-AT Complexes
Heparin
AT
Heparin binds to antithrombin and increases the
rate of thrombin inactivation
12Effect of Antithrombin on Fibrin-Bound Thrombin
The rate at which AT inactivates fibrin-bound
thrombin is reduced 50-fold
Fibrin-Bound Thrombin
AT
13Inactivation of Thrombin by Heparin-AT Complexes
Fibrin
Heparin
When thrombin binds to fibrin, it becomes
resistant to inactivation by heparin.
14Mechanism of Action
- Summary
- Catalyzes ATIII
- Specific for fluid-phase thrombin
- Prolongs aPTT by inactivating thrombin and
blocking Xa generation
15Differences in Mechanism of Action
- Any size of heparin chain can inhibit the action
of factor Xa by binding to antithrombin (AT) - In contrast, in order to inactivate thrombin
(IIa), the heparin molecule must be long enough
to bind both antithrombin and thrombin - lt half the chains of LMWH are long enough
16Differential inhibitory activity against factor
Xa and IIa activity
Unfractionated Heparin
LMWH
AT
AT
By binding to AT, most UH and LMWH can inhibit
Xa activity.Fewer than half the chains of LMWH
are of sufficient length to also bind factor
IIa, therefore has decreased anti-IIa activity.
17Low-Molecular-Weight HeparinsAnti-Facotr Xa
Anti - Factor IIa Ratios
- Agent Trade XaIIa Mol Wt (d)
- Enosaparin Lovenox 3.8 1 4,200
- Dalteparin Fragmin 2.7 1 6,000
- Ardeparin Normiflo 1.9 1 6,000
- Nadroparin 3.6 1 4,500
- Reviparin 3.5 1 4,000
- Tinzaparin 1.9 1 4,500
18Advantages of LMWH over UH
- Decreased heparin resistance
- pharmacokinetics of UH are influenced by its
bindings to plasma protein, endothelial cell
surfaces, macrophages, and other acute phase
reactants - LMWH has decreased binding to nonanticoagulant-rel
ated plasma proteins
19Advantages of LMWH over UH
- No need for laboratory monitoring
- when given on a weight-adjusted basis, the LMWH
anticoagulant response is predictable and
reproducible - Higher bioavailability - 90 vs 30
- Longer plasma half-life
- 4 to 6 hours vs 0.5 to 1 hour
- renal (slower) vs hepatic clearance
20Advantages of LMWH over UH
- Less inhibition of platelet function
- potentially less bleeding risk, but not shown in
clinical use - Lower incidence of thrombocytopenia and
thrombosis (HIT syndrome) - less interaction with platelet factor 4
- fewer heparin-dependent IgG antibodies
21Monitoring of LMWH
- Unnecessary in majority of patients
- May be useful in specific instances
- renal insufficiency (creatinine gt2.0 mg/dl)
- obese patients with altered drug pK
- major bleeding risk factors
- aPTT not useful - low anti-IIa activity
- anti-factor Xa assay is more appropriate, but not
widely available
22ESSENCE TrialEfficacy and Safety of
SubcutaneousEnoxaparin in non-Q-Wave Coronary
Events Study
- A randomized study comparing the clinical
efficacy of UFH vs enoxaparin LMWH in 3171
patients with rest angina or non-Q-wave MI - at 30 days, there was a relative risk reduction
of 15 -16 in the rate of death, MI, or
refractory ischemia as compared to standard
heparin
N Eng J Med 1997337447-452
23ESSENCE
- Enox Hep
- Incidence of death, MI, angina14 d 16.6
19.8 p.01930 d 19.8 23.3 p.016 - Minor bleeding30 d 13.8 8.8 plt.001
- Major bleeding30 d 6.5 7.0 NS
- Death alone14 d 2.2 2.3 NS30 d
2.9 3.6 NS
Enoxaparin 1.0 mg/kg q 12 h subcutaneous
Unstable Angina Non-Q Wave MI
UFH5,000 U bolus infaPTT 55-85 sec
Acute Phase min 48h, max 8 Days
30 days
24TIMI 11B - Study Design
Fixed Dose lt 65 kg gt 65 kg 40 mg
60 mg q 12 h
Enoxaparin 30 mg IV bolus 1.0 mg/kg q 12
h subcutaneous
Unstable Angina Non-Q Wave MI
UFH 70 U/kg IV bolus 15U/Kg/h UFH IV
Acute Phase min 72h, max 8 Days
Chronic Phase
43 days
25TIMI 11BLMWH in Unstable Angina
- 4,021 pts with acute coronary syndrome
- Two treatment groups UFH 70 U/kg bolus ? 15
u/kg/hr iv LMWH 30 mg bolus ? 1 mg/kg s.q. bid - Primary endpoint(death, MI, urgent
revascularization) 48-72 hr 26 14
days 15 plt0.03
Circulation 1999 1001593-1601
26Meta-AnalysisESSENCE and TIMI 11B
- Primary endpoint Death / MI / Urgent
Revscularization - Odds ratio Risk Reduction p-val
- Day 8 0.71 21 0.02
- Day 14 0.79 21 0.0005
- Day 43 0.80 20 0.0006
European Society of Cardiology - August 1998
27Primary Endpoint Day 43Death/MI/Urgent Revasc
28Difference Between Lovenox and Heparin
- Lovenox Heparin
- Half-life (hr) 4.5 dose-dependent
- Anti-XaIIa 141 11
- Molecular wt (avg) 4,500 15,000Time to
peak activity 3-5 2-4Dosing units
mg IU
29Enoxaparin in DVT Prophylaxis
- DOSAGE DURATIONin patients undergoing 30
mg q12h SC average duration 7 to 10
dayship-replacement surgery initiate 12-24h
postop up to 14 days 40 mg qd SC initiated
12h (?3) preopextended prophylaxis in 40 mg qd
SC 3 weeks post dischargehip replacementin
patients undergoing 30 mg q12h SC average
duration 7 to 10 daysknee-replacement
surg initiate 12-24h postopin patients
undergoing 40 mg qd SC average duration 7 to 10
daysabdominal surgery initiate 2h preop
30Enoxaparin in Treatment ofin acute DVT with or
without PE
- DOSAGE DURATIONFor patients who can be 1
mg q12h SC continue LOVENOX for a treated at
home for acute initiate warfarin sodium minimal
of 5 days and untilDVT without PE therapy when
appropriate a therapeutic oral anticoagulant
(usually within 72h of effect has been
achieved (INR Lovenox administration) 2.0 to
3.0). average duration 7 days For
hospitalized patients 1.5 mg/kg qd SC at the
with acute DVT with or same time every day
orwithout PE 1 mg/kg q12h SC
31Enoxaparin for UA and non-Q MI
- DOSAGE DURATIONFor the prevention of 1
mg/kg q12h SC minimum 2 days usual duration
ischemic complications with oral aspirin
therapy of therapy 2 to 8 daysof unstable
angina and (100 to 325 mg once daily) non-Q-wave
myocardialinfarction (MI) whenconcurrently
administeredwith aspirin
32Economic Assessment of LMWH vs UFHResults from
the ESSENCE Trail
- enoxaparin heparin
- Need for coronary angioplasty
(initial) 15 20 p.04 coronary
angioplasty (30d) 18 22 p.08
diagnostic cath (30d) 57 63 p.04
Initial hospitalization mean drug cost in
U.S. 155 80 mean total cost of
care 11,857 12,620mean duration of treatment
2.3 days mutidose vial enoxaparin - 1 mg/kg at
0.38/mg
Circulation 1998971702-1707
33References
- Low-molecular weight heparins.Weitz JI. N Eng J
Med 1997337688-698. - Biochemistry and pharmacology of low molecular
weight heparin.Rosenberg RD. Semin Hematol
199734(suppl 4)2-8. - Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia in patients
treated with low-molecular-weight heparin or
unfractionaed heparin.Warkentin TE, Levine MN,
Hirsh J, Horsewood P, Roberts RS, Gent M, et al.
N Engl J Med 19953321330-1335. - Use of LMWH in the treatment of venous
thromboembolic disease.Litin SC, Heit JA, Mees
KA, for the Thrombophilia Center
Investigators.Mayo Clin Proc 199873545-551.