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Vol. 296, Issue 2, 567-572, February 2001
Cardiovascular Division, Washington University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, Missouri (D.R.A., P.K.B., P.R.E.); and Berlex Biosciences,
Richmond, California (P.V., M.E.S., D.R.L.)
Inhibition of factor Xa (FXa) attenuates thrombus progression. This
study was designed to determine whether a novel, synthetic inhibitor of
FXa (ZK-807834, molecular mass 527 Da,
Ki = 0.11 nM) administered during and
briefly after pharmacologic coronary fibrinolysis increases 24-h
patency. Either ZK-807834 (
1.6 mg/kg, n = 10; 6.5 mg/kg, n = 8; or 13 mg/kg, n = 7); a peptide inhibitor of FXa, recombinant tick anticoagulant peptide
(rTAP, 13.6 mg/kg, n = 7); heparin (150 U/kg bolus
and 50 U/kg/h infusion) and aspirin (5 mg/kg) (n = 7); or saline as a control (n = 13) were
administered i.v. over 135 min in conscious dogs after thrombotic
occlusion induced by electrical injury to a coronary artery.
Fibrinolysis was induced with recombinant human tissue-type plasminogen
activator (1.0 mg/kg i.v. over 1 h), and patency was monitored
continuously for 24 h with an implanted Doppler probe. Reocclusion
occurred in all control and heparin/aspirin-treated dogs within 1 h after fibrinolysis. High dose ZK-807834 prevented reocclusion in five of six dogs and delayed reocclusion in the other dog (186 min after
recanalization, p = 0.0005 versus heparin/aspirin).
Reocclusion was delayed (406 ± 329 min), but still occurred in
three of six rTAP-treated dogs (p = 0.003 versus
heparin/aspirin). Patency after 24 h was 100% in
ZK-807834-treated and rTAP-treated dogs compared with 67% in control
and 83% in heparin/aspirin-treated dogs. PT was increased 3.7-fold,
activated partial thromboplastin time 4.9-fold, and bleeding time
2.5-fold by high dose ZK-807834 compared with 1.2-fold, 11.5-fold, and
2.3-fold, respectively, for heparin/aspirin. Inhibition of FXa with
ZK-807834 decreases reocclusion and improves patency of recanalized
arteries without increasing bleeding compared with heparin/aspirin.
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