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Title: Fibrinogen plus a non-plasmin-acting
fibrinolysis inhibitor for the reduction or prevention of adhesion
formation
United States Patent: 7,326,412
Issued: February 5, 2008
Inventors: Redl; Heinz
(Vienna, AT)
Assignee: Baxter
International Inc. (Deerfield, IL), Baxter Healthcare S.A. (Zurich, CH)
Appl. No.: 10/399,201
Filed: October 12, 2001
PCT Filed: October 12, 2001
PCT No.: PCT/US01/32043
371(c)(1),(2),(4) Date:
July 14, 2003
PCT Pub. No.: WO02/30445
PCT Pub. Date: April 18,
2002
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Abstract
Reducing or preventing adhesions which
would otherwise form in a patient during or after surgery by administering
a fibrinogen preparation containing a non-plasmin-acting fibrinolysis
inhibitor such as eglin.
Description of the
Invention
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Post-surgical adhesions are a major healthcare problem of significant
clinical and medical economic relevance. Abdominal adhesions are not only
the leading cause of small bowel obstruction but also major sources of
infertility and of abdominal and pelvic pain. It could be shown that
post-surgical adhesions cause at least 20% of cases of infertility and
about 40% of cases of chronic pelvic pain.
The great majority of adhesions in the Western world are induced by
surgery. Although it is known that their incidence may be reduced by
various improvements in surgical techniques and/or better instrumentation,
adhesions cannot be prevented without adjuvant therapy, since every minute
trauma may induce their formation.
Therefore, significant efforts have been taken for providing effective
means and treatment methods for reducing or preventing adhesions connected
with surgery. Many substances or constructs have been reported to have
positive effects on surgical adhesions, such as collagen films, collagen
gels, sodium hyaluronate/carboxymethylcellulose film and fibrin glue (see
e.g. Arnold et al., Fertility and Sterility, 73 (1) (2000), 157-161).
Unfortunately, the process of adhesion and the factors influencing the
criticality of such adhesions are largely still unknown. However, it is
known that fibrinolysis appears to play a pivotal role in adhesiogenesis
(c. Reviews of Holmdal and Holmdal et al. in Eur. J .Surg. (1997);
Suppl.577:24-31 and 56-62 incorporated herein by reference).
The effect of the application of fibrinogen preparations or fibrin glues
on anti-adhesion is highly controversial. Many earlier reports claim the
possibility of prevention of the formation of postsurgical adhesions with
such fibrin glues (e.g. Brands et al., Chirurg 61 (1990): 22-26;
Lindenberg et al., Ann. Chir. Gynecol. 73 (1984): 11-13; De laco et al.,
Fertility and Sterility 62 (2) (94): 400-404 and Takeuchi et al. (J. Am.
Assoc. Gynecol. Laparosc. 3 (4) (1996): 575-579) or fibrinogen
preparations, such as human cryoprecipiate (Toosie et al., The American
Surgeon 66 (2000): 41-45).
However, other reports detected no significant effect in preventing
adhesion formation or reproductive outcome after adhesion complications
during surgery (see e.g. Marana et al., Gynecol. Obstet. lnvest. 41
(1996): 199-202 and Gauwerky et al., Arch. Gynecol. Obstet. 247 (1990):
161-166).
Recent research has concentrated on the development of barriers of
fibrinolytic drugs and of selected agents, such as phospholipids.
Comparative tests showed that resorbable barriers, such as collagen gels,
collagen films and sodium hyaluronate/carboxymethylcellulose films, were
effective in significantly reducing adhesion formation, whereas use of
fibrin glues led to an incidence of adhesion formation similar to that in
untreated control animals (see Arnold et al.; Holmdal (see supra)). These
authors also demonstrated that the types of fibrinolytic inhibitors
contained in all commercially available fibrin sealants significantly
increased adhesion formation both to the parietal peritoneum and to the
bowel compared with untreated control animals, whereas fibrinolytic
activation with a recombinant tissue type plasminogen activator eliminated
adhesion formation to the injured bowel and significantly reduced the
number and extent of adhesions in the parietal peritoneum compared with
untreated control animals.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide for a method
for efficiently reducing or preventing adhesion in a patient as well as
for the use of specific fibrinogen preparations for adhesion reduction or
prevention.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention provides a method for reducing or preventing adhesions which
would form in a patient during or after surgery, said method comprising
administering to said patient an effective amount of a fibrinogen
preparation containing a non-plasmin acting fibrinolysis inhibitor. The
invention also provides the use of a non-plasmin acting fibrinolysis
inhibitor in the preparation of a fibrinogen preparation for the reduction
or prevention of post-surgical adhesions.
Although recent reports indicated that fibrinogen preparations, such as
fibrin sealants, have no significant effect for preventing or reducing
adhesions, it was shown by the present inventors that the use of direct
plasmin-acting fibrinolysis inhibitors in fibrinogen preparations have
negative effects on the performance of such fibrinogen preparations in
adhesion prevention. Since direct plasmin-acting fibrinolysis inhibitors,
such as aprotinin, are contained in almost all commecially available tissue
adhesives, it may be that the lack of performance of fibrinogen preparations
for preventing adhesions, as described in recent publications (Holmdal,
supra; Arnold et al, supra), is related to the presence of such direct
plasmin-acting fibrinolysis inhibitors. Surprisingly, it was discovered that
post-surgical adhesions are reduced or prevented when fibrinogen
preparations are used with fibrinolysis inhibitors which act mainly via a
non-plasmin pathway.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The method according to the present invention is efficient in reducing or
preventing adhesions in a patient by administering a fibrinogen preparation
which contains a non-plasmin acting fibrinolysis inhibitor. The presence of
a fibrinolysis inhibitor is preferred in such fibrinogen preparations in
order to delay endogenous lysis of the fibrin clot which is formed at the
wound site upon reaction of fibrinogen with thrombin. Thrombin can be
provided in a kit together with the fibrinogen preparation and is then added
exogeneously to the fibrinogen preparation. Alternatively, the fibrinogen
preparation reacts with thrombin which is endogeneously present at the wound
site. The adhesions to be reduced or prevented with the method according to
the present invention are those described in the prior art and may be
adhesions to or between organs, parts of organs or tissues in a particular
location. Generally adhesions may be defined as abnormal attachments between
tissues and organs. Such attachments may be developed in response to trauma
to the peritoneum. There trauma may be inflammatory or surgical and may
include: exposure to infection or to intestinal contents, ischemia,
initation from exogeneous materials (such as sutures, gauze particles or
glove dusting powder), abrasion, desiccation or overheating by lamps or
irrigation fluids.
The most relevant clinical adhesions are described as malformations or
fibrinaceous glueings of peritoneum covered entrails which may lead to
adhesion or briden ileus.
More specifically, such adhesions may occur after injury to or deformation
of the peritoneum during surgery which may be caused e.g. by abdominal
surgery, reproductive surgery, spinal surgery, laparatomy or other surgery
in cardiac or abdominal procedure or in the gynecological area.
The patient may be human or any animal having or having a risk for such
adhesions. Especially adhesions involving key agens and tissues, e.g. the
small intestine or the uterus and adnexa, which are the most likely to be
symptomatic, are preferably treated or prevented.
A "non-plasmin-acting" fibrinolysis inhibitor is an inhibitor with a
fibrinolysis inhibiting activity which activity is mainly based on a non-plasmin
mechanism. Examples for such inhibitors are the elastase inhibitors as
described in the WO 99/11301, incorporated herein by reference.
Another group of preferred "non-plasmin acting" fibrinolysis inhibitors
according to the present invention are those inhibitors which act mainly on
plasminogen and therefore do also belong to the group of non-plasmin acting
fibrinolysis inhibitors, because through their action, plasmin is not formed
from plasminogen. Examples for those types of inhibitors are tranexamic acid
and epsilon-amino-caproic acid.
On the other hand, "plasmin-acting" fibrinolysis inhibitors are inhibitors
which prevent the fibrinolysis process mainly by inhibiting plasmin
directly. This group of inhibitors includes substances like aprotinin.
According to the present invention the non-plasmin-acting fibrinolysis
inhibitor preferably is an elastase inhibitor. Such preferred elastase
inhibitors are selected from the group consisting of eglin,
alpha1-proteinase inhibitor (=alpha-1-antiprotease), leukocyte protease
inhibitor, elafin, alpha-2 macroglobulin and mixtures thereof.
When used in combination with fibrinogen, fibrinolysis inhibitors which do
not mainly act directly on plasmin can efficiently reduce or prevent
adhesions with would otherwise form in a patient during or after surgery. In
contrast to fibrinogen preparations without anti-fibrinolytic activity, the
use of the non-plasmin-acting inhibitors allows a controlled lytic process
in the clot formed in vivo, which leads to an efficient healing process. The
usefulness of non-plasmin-acting fibrinolysis inhibitors for controlled clot
lysis, particularly in tissues with increased fibrinolytic activity, was
disclosed in WO 99/11301.
In the method according to the present invention it is preferred to apply a
thrombin preparation simultaneously with the fibrinogen preparation as known
from the "classical" fibrinogen based tissue adhesives, as disclosed e.g. in
the U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,298,598; 4,362,567; 4,377,572 and 4,414,976 as well as
in all the patents or applications citing these patents or their
corresponding counterparts in other countries, which are incorporated herein
by reference.
The thrombin preparation and the fibrinogen preparation may be provided as a
set, preferably together with suitable administration devices which are
described in the EP 0 037 393 A, EP 0 315 222 A, EP 0 156 098 A, EP 0 210
160 A and EP 0 292 472 A, which are incorporated herein by reference.
The adhesions which are to be reduced or prevented would result from
abdominal surgery, gynecological reproductive surgery, spinal and
laparoscopic surgery. These adhesions would be those which would newly form
or those which would reform after adhesiolysis, if the present invention
were not used.
The fibrinogen preparation is preferably provided as a tissue adhesive
preparation and therefore contains all ingredients and concentrations which
are known to be preferred in such tissue adhesives. Especially the presence
of factor XIII in suitable amounts is preferred. Other substances which may
be present may be antibiotics, cytokines, etc. Plasmin-acting fibrinolysis
inhibitors should not be used with the present invention. The recent results
of Toosie et al. (see supra), wherein human cryoprecipitate, without a
plasmin-acting inhibitor, has been applied, show that such a cryoprecipitate
without any fibrinolysis inhibitor reduces intra-abdominal adhesions.
An "effective amount" of a fibrinogen preparation according to the present
invention is any amount which is able to reduce or prevent adhesion
formation in a patient significantly as compared to a control group without
such an administration. Examples for such amounts are fibrinogen
concentrations between 30 and 80 mg/ml, preferably around 40 mg/ml.
According to a further aspect, the present invention relates to the use of a
fibrinogen preparation containing a non-plasmin-acting fibrinolysis
inhibitor for producing a preparation for reduction or prevention of
adhesion formation in a patient during or after surgery.
Yet another aspect relates to a preparation for reducing or preventing
adhesion formation in a patient during or after surgery which preparation
comprises fibrinogen and a non-plasmin-acting fibrinolysis inhibitor or a
set comprising a component A containing a fibrinogen component as disclosed
in the present application and a component B comprising a thrombin
preparation.
Claim 1 of 4 Claims
1. A method for reducing or preventing
adhesion formation in a subject after gynecological or reproductive
surgery comprising administering to said subject a fibrinogen preparation
containing a non-plasmin-acting fibrinolysis inhibitor, wherein said non-plasmin-acting
fibrinolysis inhibitor is eglin in an amount of 1 mg/ml in the fibrinogen
preparation, in an amount effective to reduce or prevent adhesions. ____________________________________________
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