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Title: Safety of catheter-delivered plasmin in patients with acute lower extremity arterial or bypass graft occlusion: phase I results. Author: Marder VJ, Comerota AJ, Shlansky-Goldberg RD, Davis JP, Deng C, Hanna K, Fineberg D. Journal: J Thromb Haemost; 2012 Jun; 10(6):985-91. PubMed ID: 22487025. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Current treatment of acute peripheral artery or bypass graft occlusion utilizes catheter-directed thrombolysis of a plasminogen activator (PA). Plasmin is a direct-acting thrombolytic with a striking safety advantage over PA in preclinical models. OBJECTIVES: To report the first use of purified plasmin for acute lower extremity arterial or bypass graft thrombosis in a phase I dose-escalation study of a catheter-delivered agent. METHODS: Eighty-three patients with non-embolic occlusion of infrainguinal native arteries or bypass grafts were enrolled (safety population) into seven sequential dose cohorts to receive 25-175 mg of plasmin by intrathrombus infusion over 5 h. Arteriograms were performed at baseline, 2 h, and 5 h, and subjects were monitored for 30 days for clinical outcomes and laboratory parameters of systemic fibrinolysis. RESULTS: Major bleeding occurred in four patients (4.8%), and minor bleeding alone in 13 (15.7%), with no trend towards more bleeding at higher dosages of plasmin. There was a trend towards lower plasma concentrations of fibrinogen, α(2) -antiplasmin and α(2) -macroglobulin with increasing doses of plasmin, but the nadir fibrinogen concentration was > 350 mg dL(-1) at the highest plasmin dose. Individual nadir values were above 200 mg dL(-1) in 82 of 83 subjects, and were not different in patients with or without bleeding. Thrombolysis (≥ 50%) occurred in 79% of subjects receiving 125-175 mg of plasmin, as compared with 50% who received 25-100 mg. CONCLUSIONS: Catheter-delivered plasmin can be safely administered to patients with acute lower extremity arterial occlusion at dosages of 25-175 mg.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]