Summary
Clinical outcomes of 1,478 danaparoid treatment case reports for HIT (involving 1,418
patients) treated between 1982 and mid-2004 are analysed. Treatment in 1,291 episodes
was for current HIT. Thromboembolism due to HIT was present in 39.4a%. The patients
include 33 children and 32 pregnancies. Two hundred twenty-six patients required extra-corporeal
circuit use for renal failure, 241 patients had a concomitant thrombophilic disorder,
and 351 major operations were performed. Clinical outcomes were assessed during danaparoid
treatment (range one day to 3.5 years) plus three months of follow-up. Of the danaparoid-treated
patients 83.8a% survived; 63.7a% had no or minor adverse events and 20.1a% suffered
serious non-fatal adverse events. New thromboses occurred during 9.7a% of treatment
episodes, and 16.4a% of treatment episodes had an inadequate treatment response (i.
e. developed one or more of the following: new/extended thrombosis, persistent/new
platelet count reduction, unplanned amputation during treatment and follow-up). Major
bleeding was reported in 8.1a% of treatment episodes. Clinical cross-reactivity of
danaparoid (new/persistent platelet count reduction and/or new/extended thrombosis)
was confirmed serologically in 23 of 36 patients with positive pretreatment serological
danaparoid cross-reactivity and in 22 of 32 additional patients tested at the time
of the new event, i. e. a total of 45 patients (3.2a%). Clinical outcomes of these
case reports of patients given danaparoid because of suspected or confirmed HIT appear
to be comparable with those reported by others who used direct thrombin inhibitors,
especially when a sufficient danaparoid dosing intensity was used in patients with
isolated HIT. Post-operative bleeding limits danaparoid use for cardiopulmonary by-pass
surgery. Routine clinical and platelet count monitoring are required to minimise adverse
reactions due to cross-reactivity.
Keywords
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia - danaparoid - case reports