Oral Delivery of Anticoagulant Doses of Heparin

Abstract
Background —Parenteral heparin is the anticoagulant of choice in hospitalized patients. Continued anticoagulation is achieved by subcutaneous administration of low-molecular-weight heparin or with an orally active anticoagulant such as warfarin. An oral heparin formulation would avoid the inconvenience of subcutaneous injection and the unfavorable drug interactions and adverse events associated with warfarin. A candidate delivery agent, sodium N -[8(-2-hydroxybenzoyl)amino]caprylate (SNAC), was evaluated with escalating oral heparin doses in a randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical study for safety, tolerability, and effects on indexes of anticoagulation. Methods and Results —Increases in activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), anti-factors IIa and Xa, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) concentrations were detected when normal volunteers were dosed with 10.5 g SNAC/20 000 IU heparin by gavage in some subjects. For the entire group, 30 000 IU SNAC and heparin elevated TFPI from 74.9±7.6 to 254.2±12.3 mg/mL ( P P P Conclusions —Heparin, administered orally in combination with the delivery agent SNAC, produces significant elevations in 4 indexes of anticoagulant effect in healthy human volunteers. These results establish the feasibility of oral delivery of anticoagulant doses of heparin in humans and may have broader implications for the absorption of macromolecules.