Abstract
The history of the traditional anticoagulants is marked by both perseverance and serendipity. The anticoagulant effect of heparin was discovered by McLean in 1915, while he was searching for a procoagulant in dog liver. Link identified dicumarol from spoiled sweet clover hay in 1939 as the causal agent of the sweet clover disease, a hemorrhagic disorder in cattle. Hirudin extracts from the medicinal leech were first used for parenteral anticoagulation in the clinic in 1909, but their use was limited due to adverse effects and difficulties in achieving highly purified extracts. Heparins and coumarins (i.e.: warfarin, phenprocoumon, acenocoumarol) have been the mainstay of anticoagulant therapy for more than 60 years. Over the past decades, the drug discovery paradigm has shifted toward rational design following a target-based approach, in which specific proteins, or “targets”, are chosen on current understandings of pathophysiology, small molecules that inhibit the target’s activity may be identified by high-throughput screening and, in selected cases, these new molecules can be developed further as drugs. Despite the application of rational design, serendipity has still played a significant role in some of the new discoveries. This review will focus on the discovery of the main anticoagulant drugs in current clinical use, like unfractionated heparin, low-molecular-weight heparins, fondaparinux, coumarins (i.e.: warfarin, acenocoumarol, phenprocoumon), parenteral direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) (i.e.: argatroban, recombinant hirudins, bivalirudin), oral DTIs (i.e.: dabigatran) and oral direct factor Xa inhibitors (i.e.: rivaroxaban, apixaban).
Keywords: Anticoagulants, heparin, hirudin, history, warfarin
Current Drug Discovery Technologies
Title:Discovery of Anticoagulant Drugs: A Historical Perspective
Volume: 9 Issue: 2
Author(s): Antonio Gomez-Outes, M Luisa Suarez-Gea, Gonzalo Calvo-Rojas, Ramon Lecumberri, Eduardo Rocha, Carmen Pozo-Hernandez, Ana Isabel Terleira-Fernandez and Emilio Vargas-Castrillon
Affiliation:
Keywords: Anticoagulants, heparin, hirudin, history, warfarin
Abstract: The history of the traditional anticoagulants is marked by both perseverance and serendipity. The anticoagulant effect of heparin was discovered by McLean in 1915, while he was searching for a procoagulant in dog liver. Link identified dicumarol from spoiled sweet clover hay in 1939 as the causal agent of the sweet clover disease, a hemorrhagic disorder in cattle. Hirudin extracts from the medicinal leech were first used for parenteral anticoagulation in the clinic in 1909, but their use was limited due to adverse effects and difficulties in achieving highly purified extracts. Heparins and coumarins (i.e.: warfarin, phenprocoumon, acenocoumarol) have been the mainstay of anticoagulant therapy for more than 60 years. Over the past decades, the drug discovery paradigm has shifted toward rational design following a target-based approach, in which specific proteins, or “targets”, are chosen on current understandings of pathophysiology, small molecules that inhibit the target’s activity may be identified by high-throughput screening and, in selected cases, these new molecules can be developed further as drugs. Despite the application of rational design, serendipity has still played a significant role in some of the new discoveries. This review will focus on the discovery of the main anticoagulant drugs in current clinical use, like unfractionated heparin, low-molecular-weight heparins, fondaparinux, coumarins (i.e.: warfarin, acenocoumarol, phenprocoumon), parenteral direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) (i.e.: argatroban, recombinant hirudins, bivalirudin), oral DTIs (i.e.: dabigatran) and oral direct factor Xa inhibitors (i.e.: rivaroxaban, apixaban).
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Gomez-Outes Antonio, Luisa Suarez-Gea M, Calvo-Rojas Gonzalo, Lecumberri Ramon, Rocha Eduardo, Pozo-Hernandez Carmen, Isabel Terleira-Fernandez Ana and Vargas-Castrillon Emilio, Discovery of Anticoagulant Drugs: A Historical Perspective, Current Drug Discovery Technologies 2012; 9 (2) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1570163811209020083
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1570163811209020083 |
Print ISSN 1570-1638 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1875-6220 |
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