Seminars in thrombosis and hemostasis
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Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), a serious side effect of heparin treatment, requires alternative anticoagulation in most affected patients. The recombinant hirudin (r-hirudin) lepirudin has been approved for this purpose after two prospective trials in laboratory-confirmed HIT patients. Other drugs available for this purpose are danaparoid sodium (a heparinoid) and argatroban, a synthetic direct thrombin inhibitor. ⋯ Antihirudin antibodies, which can alter the pharmacokinetics as well as the pharmacodynamics of hirudin, can also be countered by close monitoring and appropriate dose adjustments. Whereas hirudins have not yet managed to gain importance in non-HIT indications such as unstable coronary syndromes, they have a major role to play in the treatment of HIT. The choice between the available drugs for HIT, namely lepirudin, danaparoid, and argatroban, has to be made according to the clinical presentation of the patient.