With the increasing incidence of thromboembolism in children and improvement in management for patients with medically complex diseases, expanded availability of safe and effective anticoagulant medications is needed. Traditionally, the most common anticoagulants used for the treatment or prevention of venous thromboembolism or embolic stroke in children were either unfractionated heparin or the low-molecular-weight heparins. These medications require either intravenous access or daily subcutaneous injections, in addition to multiple venepunctures to monitor drug concentrations. Direct oral anticoagulants provide an alternative, and potentially safer, choice for children, as they are available in oral formulations and do not require drug monitoring. With the approval of the direct factor Xa inhibitor, rivaroxaban (by the European Medicines Agency and Health Canada), and the direct thrombin inhibitor, dabigatran (by the European Medicines Agency and US Food and Drug Administration), the field of paediatric anticoagulation is changing. In this Review, we provide an overview of the four direct oral anticoagulants approved in adults for the treatment and prevention of thrombosis and the completed and ongoing paediatric trials.
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