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Comparative Study
. 1998 Dec;132(6):469-77.
doi: 10.1016/s0022-2143(98)90124-x.

Focused antithrombotic therapy: novel anti-platelet salicylates with reduced ulcerogenic potential and higher first-pass detoxification than aspirin in rats

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Comparative Study

Focused antithrombotic therapy: novel anti-platelet salicylates with reduced ulcerogenic potential and higher first-pass detoxification than aspirin in rats

D Y Hung et al. J Lab Clin Med. 1998 Dec.

Abstract

The use of aspirin as an anti-platelet drug is limited by its propensity to induce gastric injury and by its adverse effect on vascular prostacyclin formation. Two phenolic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (salicylic acid and diflunisal) were modified by esterification with a series of O-acyl moieties. The short-term ulcerogenic in vitro and in vivo anti-platelet properties, pharmacodynamic profiles, and extent of hepatic extraction of these phenolic esters were compared with aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid). The more lipophilic esters (longer carbon chain length in O-acyl group) show significantly less gastrotoxicity in stressed rats than does aspirin after a single oral dose. The in vitro and in vivo anti-platelet studies show that these phenolic esters inhibited (1) arachidonate-triggered human platelet aggregation and (2) thrombin-stimulated rat serum thromboxane A2 production by platelets in the clotting process almost as effectively as aspirin. The hepatic extractions of these O-acyl derivatives are significantly higher than those of aspirin. The pharmacodynamic studies show that these O-acyl derivatives of salicylic acid and diflunisal probably bind to, or combine with, the same site on the platelet cyclooxygenase as aspirin. Replacing the O-acetyl group with longer chain O-acyl moiety in this series of phenolic esters markedly reduced the potential of these agents to induce short-term gastric injury but did not lessen their activity as inhibitors of platelet aggregation. These non-acetyl salicylates may therefore represent a novel class of anti-platelet drugs with less ulcerogenic potential.

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Comment in

  • Aspirin analogs as antithrombotic agents.
    Marcus AJ, Broekman MJ. Marcus AJ, et al. J Lab Clin Med. 1998 Dec;132(6):446-7. doi: 10.1016/s0022-2143(98)90118-4. J Lab Clin Med. 1998. PMID: 9851731 Review. No abstract available.

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