Objectives: This study was performed to evaluate the efficacy of peri-interventional treatment with recombinant hirudin (r-hirudin [HBW 023]) compared with heparin in the prevention of troponin T release in patients with unstable angina.
Background: Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty in patients with unstable angina is associated with a high risk of acute thrombotic complications.
Methods: Serial troponin T measurements were performed in 61 patients with unstable angina during the 48-h observation period after coronary angioplasty of the ischemia-related lesion. Patients were randomly assigned to peri-interventional intravenous treatment with either r-hirudin (dosage group I: 0.3-mg/kg body weight bolus, 0.12 mg/kg per h for 24 h; dosage group II: 0.5-mg/kg bolus, 0.24 mg/kg per h for 24 h) or heparin (150-IU/kg bolus, 20 IU/kg per h for 24 h). All patients received acetylsalicylic acid before coronary angiography. After 24 h, patients received a constant low dose infusion of either hirudin (0.04 mg/kg per h) or heparin (7 IU/kg per h) for another 24 h. The power of the study to detect a decrease in abnormal troponin T levels from 60% (heparin group) to 20% (combined r-hirudin groups) was 88%.
Results: Serial troponin T measurements revealed two peaks within the 48 h after coronary angioplasty in the heparin but not the hirudin groups. An elevated serum troponin T concentration (> 0.2 ng/ml) within 48 h of coronary angioplasty was found in 9 (24%) of 38 patients in the hirudin groups (5 [25%] of 20 in dosage group I; 4 [22%] of 18 in dosage group II) compared with 11 (58%) of 19 in the heparin group (p = 0.01). We observed major cardiac events (death, myocardial infarction, abrupt vessel closure) in 1 (4.8%) of 21 patients in dosage group I, 1 (5.3%) of 19 in dosage group II and 3 (14.3%) of 21 in the heparin group (p = 0.33).
Conclusions: In this pilot trial, hirudin appears to be superior to heparin in preventing troponin T release after coronary angioplasty.