Drug Monograph

Fondaparinux (Arixtra)

Fondaparinux sodium — synthetic pentasaccharide (MW 1,728 Da)
Selective Factor Xa Inhibitor · Subcutaneous
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
17 h (young); 21 h (elderly)
Metabolism
None — excreted unchanged in urine
Protein Binding
>97% to plasma proteins (>94% specifically to AT-III)
Bioavailability
100% (SC)
Volume of Distribution
7–11 L (limited to blood volume)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Synthetic Selective Factor Xa Inhibitor (Pentasaccharide)
Available Doses
2.5 mg/0.5 mL, 5 mg/0.4 mL, 7.5 mg/0.6 mL, 10 mg/0.8 mL (prefilled syringes)
Route
Subcutaneous only
Renal Adjustment
Contraindicated if CrCl <30 mL/min
Hepatic Adjustment
No dose adjustment (mild–moderate); caution in moderate (increased hemorrhage); severe not studied
Pregnancy
Crosses placenta; use only if benefit outweighs risk; monitor neonate for bleeding
Lactation
Excreted in rat milk; unknown in humans — weigh benefit vs risk
Schedule / Legal Status
Rx only
Generic Available
Yes
Reversal Agent
No antidote — protamine does NOT reverse fondaparinux; consider rFVIIa in life-threatening bleeding
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
DVT prophylaxis — hip fracture surgery (incl. extended prophylaxis)AdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
DVT prophylaxis — hip replacement surgeryAdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
DVT prophylaxis — knee replacement surgeryAdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
DVT prophylaxis — abdominal surgeryAdults at risk of thromboembolic complicationsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Treatment of acute DVT (with warfarin)AdultsBridge to warfarinFDA Approved
Treatment of acute PE (with warfarin, inpatient)AdultsBridge to warfarinFDA Approved
Treatment of VTE in paediatric patients (≥10 kg)Paediatric (≥10 kg)Weight-basedFDA Approved

Fondaparinux is the first synthetic anticoagulant: a chemically defined pentasaccharide modelled on the antithrombin-binding sequence found in heparin chains. Its completely selective mechanism (Factor Xa inhibition only, no anti-IIa activity) gives it a highly predictable pharmacokinetic profile with 100% bioavailability, no CYP metabolism, and once-daily dosing. Phase II (PENTATHLON) and phase III trials (EPHESUS, PENTHIFRA, PENTAMAKS) demonstrated superior VTE prevention compared with enoxaparin in orthopaedic surgery. A key advantage is its very low risk of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) because it does not bind platelet factor 4 (PF4).

Off-Label Uses

Acute coronary syndromes (UA/NSTEMI): The OASIS-5 trial (n=20,078) showed fondaparinux 2.5 mg daily was noninferior to enoxaparin for ischaemic events and reduced major bleeding by 50% (2.1% vs 4.1%) with 17% lower 30-day mortality. ESC guidelines recommend fondaparinux as the preferred anticoagulant in NSTE-ACS when PCI is not planned within 24 hours. Evidence: High

Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT): Fondaparinux does not cross-react with HIT antibodies in most patients and is used as an alternative anticoagulant. ACCP assigns a low evidence rating; further studies are needed. Not FDA-approved for this indication. Evidence: Low

Superficial venous thrombosis (SVT): CHEST 2021 guidelines recommend fondaparinux as the preferred anticoagulant for SVT of the lower limb at risk of progression, over prophylactic or therapeutic LMWH. Evidence: Moderate

Dose

Dosing

VTE Prophylaxis by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Hip fracture surgery2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg/dayStart 6–8 h post-op; continue up to 32 days total (peri-operative + extended prophylaxis)
PENTHIFRA-Plus: extended prophylaxis reduced VTE from 35% to 1.4%
Hip replacement surgery2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg/dayStart 6–8 h post-op; usual duration 5–9 days (up to 11 days studied)
EPHESUS/PENTATHLON: fondaparinux superior to enoxaparin for VTE prevention in hip replacement
Knee replacement surgery2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg/dayStart 6–8 h post-op; usual duration 5–9 days (up to 11 days studied)
PENTAMAKS: 55% RRR in VTE vs enoxaparin; starting <6 h post-op increases bleeding risk
Abdominal surgery (VTE risk patients)2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg SC once daily2.5 mg/dayStart 6–8 h post-op; usual duration 5–9 days (up to 10 days studied)
Contraindicated if body weight <50 kg (prophylaxis only)

VTE Treatment (Adult, Weight-Based)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Acute DVT/PE — body weight <50 kg5 mg SC once daily5 mg SC once daily5 mg/dayBridge to warfarin; continue ≥5 days AND until INR 2–3 for ≥24 h
Usual duration 5–9 days; up to 26 days studied in clinical trials
Acute DVT/PE — body weight 50–100 kg7.5 mg SC once daily7.5 mg SC once daily7.5 mg/dayBridge to warfarin; continue ≥5 days AND until INR 2–3 for ≥24 h
MATISSE-DVT: noninferior to enoxaparin for recurrent VTE at 97 days
Acute DVT/PE — body weight >100 kg10 mg SC once daily10 mg SC once daily10 mg/dayBridge to warfarin; continue ≥5 days AND until INR 2–3 for ≥24 h
MATISSE-PE: noninferior to UFH for recurrent VTE in PE treatment

Paediatric VTE Treatment (≥10 kg)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
VTE treatment — paediatric (≥10 kg)0.1 mg/kg SC once daily0.1 mg/kg SC once daily (adjust by anti-Xa levels)7.5 mg/dayMonitor fondaparinux-based anti-Xa 2–4 h after 2nd or 3rd dose; target 0.5–1.0 mg/L
Patients >20 kg: round to nearest prefilled syringe per PI table; no data for <1 year
Clinical Pearl: Timing of First Postoperative Dose

The first dose of fondaparinux must be given no earlier than 6 hours after surgical closure, and only once haemostasis has been established. In clinical trials, administering fondaparinux earlier than 6 hours post-operatively significantly increased the incidence of major bleeding. If surgical haemostasis is not achieved, fondaparinux initiation should be delayed until 6–8 hours after haemostasis is confirmed. For hip fracture surgery, if surgery is delayed, fondaparinux may be started pre-operatively with the last dose at least 24 hours before surgery.

No Reversal Agent Available

There is no specific antidote for fondaparinux. Protamine sulfate does not neutralise its anti-Xa activity. In life-threatening bleeding, recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa, NovoSeven) has been used based on limited evidence, but its efficacy is not established. The long half-life (17–21 h) means anticoagulant effects persist for 2–4 days after the last dose in patients with normal renal function, and even longer in renal impairment. This should be considered when weighing fondaparinux against alternatives in patients at high bleeding risk.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Fondaparinux is a fully synthetic pentasaccharide that replicates the exact five-sugar sequence within heparin chains responsible for binding antithrombin III (AT-III). This binding induces a conformational change in AT-III that enhances its inhibition of Factor Xa by approximately 300-fold. Critically, because fondaparinux is only five saccharide units long (far shorter than the 18 units needed to bridge AT-III to thrombin), it selectively inhibits Factor Xa without any direct anti-thrombin (anti-IIa) activity. Once the fondaparinux–AT-III complex inactivates Factor Xa, fondaparinux dissociates and can be recycled to bind another AT-III molecule, functioning catalytically. This selective mechanism produces a predictable, dose-linear anticoagulant effect with minimal protein binding beyond AT-III, virtually eliminating the unpredictable dose-response that characterises unfractionated heparin.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
Absorption100% bioavailability SC; Tmax ~2 h; rapid and complete absorption with low inter-subject variability (Cmax variability ~11.6%)Complete and predictable absorption enables fixed-dose prophylaxis (2.5 mg) without laboratory monitoring in most patients; once-daily dosing is sufficient due to the long half-life
DistributionVd 7–11 L (limited to blood volume); >97% bound to plasma proteins, with >94% specifically to AT-III; no binding to albumin or alpha-1-acid glycoproteinHighly specific AT-III binding means protein-binding displacement interactions with other drugs are not expected; small Vd confirms drug remains in the intravascular compartment
MetabolismNo metabolism — fondaparinux is not metabolised in vivo; does not inhibit CYP1A2, 2A6, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 2E1, or 3A4 in vitroNo hepatic metabolism eliminates CYP-mediated drug interactions; dose adjustment for hepatic impairment is not required (moderate); severe hepatic impairment has not been studied
EliminationExcreted unchanged in urine (64–77% recovered at 72 h); plasma clearance 5.1–7.9 mL/min; renal clearance 4.0–7.9 mL/min; t½ 17 h (young), 21 h (elderly)Entirely renal elimination makes fondaparinux contraindicated at CrCl <30 mL/min; in elderly patients, longer half-life may prolong anticoagulant effect — contributes to increased bleeding risk in this population; steady state reached after 3rd–4th daily dose
SE

Side Effects

≥10% Very Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Anaemia / post-procedural haemorrhage~11%Most common in surgical prophylaxis setting; includes wound drainage and post-operative bleeding at surgical site; partly attributable to the surgical procedure
1–10% Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Minor bleeding (haematuria, injection site bleeding, ecchymosis)1–4%Dose-dependent; higher in treatment dosing than prophylaxis; typically self-limiting
Moderate thrombocytopenia (50,000–100,000/mm³)3.0% (prophylaxis); 0.5% (treatment)Not immune-mediated; fondaparinux does not bind PF4, so HIT risk is negligible; discontinue if platelets fall below 100,000
Nausea3%Usually mild and transient; no dose adjustment needed
Elevated hepatic transaminases1–3%Transient elevations in AST/ALT; generally asymptomatic and resolve spontaneously
Oedema~3%Peripheral oedema in surgical prophylaxis patients; assess for other causes including DVT
Injection site reaction (rash, pruritus)~1%Mild local reactions; rotate injection sites; syringe needle guard contains dry natural latex rubber — caution in latex-allergic patients
Serious Serious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Major haemorrhage1.6–3.0% (prophylaxis); 1.1–1.2% (VTE treatment)Any time during therapyDiscontinue fondaparinux; supportive measures (transfusion, surgical haemostasis); no specific antidote — consider rFVIIa in life-threatening haemorrhage; effects persist 2–4 days after last dose
Spinal / epidural haematomaRare (case reports)Hours to days after neuraxial procedureFDA Boxed Warning; emergent spinal decompression; delay fondaparinux until ≥2 h after catheter removal; monitor for neurological impairment
Severe thrombocytopenia (<50,000/mm³)0.2%Days to weeksDiscontinue fondaparinux; investigate for other causes; may require platelet transfusion if actively bleeding
Anaphylactoid / anaphylactic reactionsRare (post-marketing)Minutes to hours after injectionDiscontinue permanently; manage with standard anaphylaxis protocol; note latex in syringe needle guard may contribute in latex-sensitive patients
Major bleeding with renal impairment (CrCl 30–50 mL/min)3.8% (prophylaxis in moderate RI)Accumulation over daysUse with extreme caution; closely monitor renal function and signs of bleeding; bleeding risk rises steeply with declining CrCl
Discontinuation Discontinuation Rates
Prophylaxis Trials
~3% due to adverse events
Top reasons: Bleeding, thrombocytopenia, elevated liver enzymes
VTE Treatment Trials
~2% due to adverse events
Top reasons: Bleeding; similar to comparator (enoxaparin or UFH)
Renal Impairment and Bleeding Risk: Dose-Dependent Relationship

Major bleeding during fondaparinux prophylaxis in orthopaedic surgery increases sharply with declining renal function: 1.6% (normal), 2.4% (mild RI), 3.8% (moderate RI), and 4.8% (severe RI) per the FDA PI. Because fondaparinux is eliminated entirely by the kidneys, drug accumulation occurs rapidly in renal impairment. Fondaparinux is contraindicated at CrCl <30 mL/min and should be used with caution at CrCl 30–50 mL/min, with close monitoring of renal function and signs of bleeding.

Int

Drug Interactions

Fondaparinux has an exceptionally clean interaction profile. It is not metabolised by CYP enzymes and binds specifically to AT-III without significant binding to albumin or other plasma proteins, so pharmacokinetic interactions via protein-binding displacement or hepatic metabolism are not expected. Clinical studies confirmed no pharmacokinetic interactions with warfarin, aspirin, piroxicam, or digoxin. The primary interaction concern is pharmacodynamic: co-administration with other agents that impair haemostasis increases bleeding risk.

MajorDirect Oral Anticoagulants (rivaroxaban, apixaban, dabigatran)
MechanismOverlapping anticoagulant pathways (anti-Xa or anti-IIa)
EffectSubstantially increased haemorrhagic risk; no clinical scenario justifies concurrent use
ManagementContraindicated; when transitioning, start DOAC at the time the next fondaparinux dose would be due
Medscape
ModerateAntiplatelet Agents (ASA, clopidogrel, ticagrelor)
MechanismAdditive impairment of haemostasis via different pathways
EffectIncreased bleeding risk; concurrent use is standard in ACS (OASIS-5) but not routine in VTE prophylaxis
ManagementIn ACS: expected co-administration; monitor for bleeding. In VTE prophylaxis: discontinue antiplatelets pre-operatively if possible per surgical guidelines
FDA PI
ModerateWarfarin
MechanismAdditive anticoagulant effect; fondaparinux does not affect PT/INR directly
EffectIncreased bleeding risk during overlap period; no pharmacokinetic interaction confirmed in clinical studies
ManagementExpected combination for VTE treatment bridge; overlap for ≥5 days until INR 2–3 for ≥24 h before stopping fondaparinux; INR not affected by fondaparinux
FDA PI
ModerateNSAIDs (ibuprofen, ketorolac, piroxicam)
MechanismNSAIDs impair platelet function and promote GI mucosal injury
EffectIncreased risk of bleeding; no pharmacokinetic interaction (confirmed with piroxicam in clinical study)
ManagementDiscontinue NSAIDs prior to fondaparinux initiation when possible; if essential, monitor closely for bleeding
FDA PI
MinorDigoxin
MechanismNo interaction identified
EffectNo effect on digoxin pharmacokinetics at steady state or fondaparinux pharmacokinetics
ManagementNo dose adjustment required; confirmed in clinical study with healthy volunteers
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • Renal Function (CrCl)Baseline; periodic during therapy
    Routine
    Critical parameter — fondaparinux is contraindicated at CrCl <30 mL/min and requires caution at CrCl 30–50 mL/min; reassess if renal function declines during therapy; discontinue immediately if CrCl drops below 30
  • Platelet CountBaseline; periodic
    Routine
    Discontinue if platelets fall below 100,000/mm³; moderate thrombocytopenia occurred in 3% of prophylaxis patients and 0.5% of treatment patients; severe thrombocytopenia (<50,000) in 0.2%
  • CBC / HaemoglobinBaseline; periodic
    Routine
    Unexplained drop in haemoglobin or haematocrit should prompt evaluation for occult bleeding; stool occult blood testing recommended during therapy
  • Anti-Xa Level (fondaparinux-based)Paediatric: 2–4 h after 2nd–3rd dose, then periodically
    Trigger-based
    Required for paediatric dosing (target 0.5–1.0 mg/L); must use fondaparinux-specific calibrator — heparin or LMWH calibrators are NOT appropriate; routine anti-Xa monitoring not required in adult prophylaxis or treatment
  • Signs of BleedingEvery clinical assessment
    Routine
    Assess surgical wound drainage, injection sites, urine, and stool; back pain or neurological symptoms after neuraxial procedure require urgent evaluation for epidural haematoma
  • Neurological StatusFrequently after neuraxial anaesthesia
    Trigger-based
    Per FDA Boxed Warning: monitor for signs of spinal cord compression (back pain, leg weakness, numbness, bowel/bladder dysfunction); urgent MRI and neurosurgical consultation if suspected
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Severe renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min): Fondaparinux is eliminated entirely by the kidneys; drug accumulation and life-threatening bleeding occur with severe renal dysfunction
  • Active major bleeding: Any uncontrolled haemorrhage
  • Bacterial endocarditis: Risk of mycotic aneurysm rupture
  • Body weight <50 kg (prophylaxis only): Increased bleeding risk at prophylactic dose; not a contraindication for weight-based VTE treatment doses
  • Thrombocytopenia with positive anti-platelet antibody test in the presence of fondaparinux: Rare immune-mediated reaction
  • History of serious hypersensitivity (angioedema, anaphylaxis) to fondaparinux

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Moderate renal impairment (CrCl 30–50 mL/min): Increased drug exposure and bleeding risk; may still be used with close monitoring and clinical judgement
  • Concurrent neuraxial anaesthesia or spinal puncture: Risk of spinal/epidural haematoma (FDA Boxed Warning); delay fondaparinux ≥2 hours after catheter removal
  • Planned PCI within 24 hours (ACS setting): Catheter thrombus risk (0.9% in OASIS-5); requires supplemental UFH bolus at time of PCI

Use with Caution

  • Elderly (≥75 years): Prolonged half-life (21 h); increased bleeding risk; lower body weight common
  • Moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh B): Decreased Cmax by 22% and AUC by 39% in single-dose study; higher haemorrhage incidence observed compared with normal hepatic function
  • Patients undergoing PCI (ACS): Use UFH bolus at time of PCI to prevent catheter thrombus; FUTURA/OASIS-8 data support low-dose UFH (50 U/kg) as adjunct
  • Latex allergy: Syringe needle guard contains dry natural latex rubber
FDA Boxed Warning Spinal / Epidural Haematoma Risk

Epidural or spinal haematomas may occur in patients anticoagulated with fondaparinux who are receiving neuraxial anaesthesia or undergoing spinal puncture. These haematomas can result in long-term or permanent paralysis. Risk is increased by indwelling epidural catheters, concomitant use of other haemostasis-impairing drugs (NSAIDs, antiplatelets, other anticoagulants), history of spinal deformity or difficult spinal puncture, and repeated puncture. Patients must be monitored frequently for signs of neurological impairment and treated urgently if spinal cord compression is suspected.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Explain that fondaparinux is a blood-thinning injection given once daily under the skin to prevent blood clots after surgery or to treat existing blood clots in the legs or lungs. It works by blocking a specific clotting factor (Factor Xa) and is given as a fixed dose that does not require routine blood test monitoring in most adults.

How to Take

Fondaparinux is injected once daily into the skin fold of the lower abdomen, alternating between the left and right sides. The prefilled syringe comes with an automatic needle protection system. If you are self-injecting at home, you will receive training on proper injection technique. Store syringes at room temperature (15–30°C). Each syringe is for single use only — do not reuse or share.

Bleeding Risk
Tell patientWhile taking fondaparinux you will bleed and bruise more easily than normal. Use caution with sharp objects and avoid activities that may cause injury. Apply gentle pressure to injection sites for at least one minute after each injection.
Call prescriberReport immediately: unusual bruising, blood in urine or stool, black tarry stool, vomiting blood, severe headache or confusion, prolonged bleeding from cuts, or persistent nosebleeds.
Neuraxial Procedures
Tell patientIf you have had or will have a spinal or epidural anaesthesia, there is a small risk of bleeding around the spinal cord. This is rare but serious and can cause paralysis. You will be monitored closely after these procedures.
Call prescriberReport immediately: back pain, tingling, numbness (especially in the legs), muscle weakness, or loss of bowel/bladder control after a spinal procedure or epidural.
Renal Function
Tell patientFondaparinux is removed from your body entirely through the kidneys. If your kidney function is reduced, you may need dose changes or an alternative medication. Inform your prescriber about any kidney problems. Stay well hydrated unless told otherwise.
Call prescriberReport any decrease in urine output, swelling in the ankles or feet, or changes in urine colour, as these may indicate worsening kidney function.
Self-Injection Technique
Tell patientInject into a skin fold on the lower abdomen, alternating sides each day. Do not inject into bruised, tender, or hardened areas. The needle guard will automatically cover the needle after use. Do not recap manually. Dispose of used syringes in a sharps container.
Call prescriberContact your care team if you miss a dose, if you are unsure about your injection technique, or if the solution appears cloudy or contains particles.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. ARIXTRA (fondaparinux sodium) Prescribing Information. Mylan Institutional LLC; revised December 2024. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2024/021345s052lbl.pdfMost current FDA label with adult and paediatric dosing, contraindications, adverse reactions, and pharmacokinetic data for fondaparinux.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Yusuf S, Mehta SR, Chrolavicius S, et al. Comparison of fondaparinux and enoxaparin in acute coronary syndromes (OASIS-5). N Engl J Med. 2006;354(14):1464–1476. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa055443Landmark RCT (n=20,078) demonstrating fondaparinux 2.5 mg daily is noninferior to enoxaparin for ischaemic events in NSTE-ACS while halving major bleeding and reducing 30-day mortality by 17%.
  2. Mehta SR, Granger CB, Eikelboom JW, et al. Efficacy and safety of fondaparinux versus enoxaparin in patients with ACS undergoing PCI: results from OASIS-5. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2007;50(18):1742–1751. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2007.07.042PCI subgroup analysis of OASIS-5 confirming bleeding reduction with fondaparinux and demonstrating that UFH co-administration at PCI prevents catheter thrombus.
  3. Buller HR, Davidson BL, Decousus H, et al. Subcutaneous fondaparinux versus intravenous unfractionated heparin in the initial treatment of pulmonary embolism (MATISSE-PE). N Engl J Med. 2003;349(18):1695–1702. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa035451Open-label RCT showing fondaparinux noninferior to UFH for PE treatment with similar rates of recurrent VTE and major bleeding.
  4. Buller HR, Davidson BL, Decousus H, et al. Fondaparinux or enoxaparin for the initial treatment of symptomatic deep venous thrombosis (MATISSE-DVT). Ann Intern Med. 2004;140(11):867–873. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-140-11-200406010-00007Randomised trial demonstrating fondaparinux noninferior to enoxaparin for DVT treatment with comparable efficacy and safety at 97 days.
  5. Eriksson BI, Bauer KA, Lassen MR, Turpie AGG, for the Steering Committee of the Pentasaccharide in Hip-Fracture Surgery Study. Fondaparinux compared with enoxaparin for the prevention of venous thromboembolism after hip-fracture surgery (PENTHIFRA). N Engl J Med. 2001;345(18):1298–1304. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa011100Phase III trial showing fondaparinux reduced VTE by 56% compared with enoxaparin in hip fracture surgery prophylaxis.
  6. Bauer KA, Eriksson BI, Lassen MR, Turpie AGG, for the PENTAMAKS Steering Committee. Fondaparinux compared with enoxaparin for the prevention of venous thromboembolism after elective major knee surgery. N Engl J Med. 2001;345(18):1305–1310. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa011099PENTAMAKS trial demonstrating 55% VTE risk reduction with fondaparinux vs enoxaparin in elective knee replacement.
Guidelines
  1. Stevens SM, Woller SC, Kreuziger LB, et al. Antithrombotic Therapy for VTE Disease: Second Update of the CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel Report. Chest. 2021;160(6):e545–e608. doi:10.1016/j.chest.2021.07.055CHEST 2021 guideline recommending fondaparinux as preferred anticoagulant for superficial venous thrombosis and covering VTE treatment and prophylaxis options.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Paolucci F, Clavies MC, Donat F, et al. Fondaparinux sodium mechanism of action: identification of specific binding to purified and human plasma-derived proteins. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2002;41(Suppl 2):11–18. doi:10.2165/00003088-200241002-00002Key study demonstrating >94% specific binding of fondaparinux to AT-III with no binding to albumin or alpha-1-acid glycoprotein, explaining its clean drug interaction profile.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Donat F, Duret JP, Santoni A, et al. The pharmacokinetics of fondaparinux sodium in healthy volunteers. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2002;41(Suppl 2):1–9. doi:10.2165/00003088-200241002-00001Definitive PK study establishing 100% bioavailability, 17 h half-life (21 h elderly), Vd 7–11 L, and linear pharmacokinetics across the therapeutic dose range.
  2. Schiele F. Fondaparinux and acute coronary syndromes: update on the OASIS 5–6 studies. Vasc Health Risk Manag. 2010;6:179–187. doi:10.2147/vhrm.s5950Comprehensive review of OASIS-5 and OASIS-6 results discussing fondaparinux’s position in ACS management, catheter thrombus risk, and PCI co-administration strategies.
  3. Lieu C, Shi J, Donat F, et al. Fondaparinux sodium is not metabolised in mammalian liver fractions and does not inhibit cytochrome P450-mediated metabolism of concomitant drugs. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2002;41(Suppl 2):19–26. doi:10.2165/00003088-200241002-00003In vitro study confirming fondaparinux does not undergo hepatic metabolism and does not inhibit major CYP isoenzymes, supporting its lack of pharmacokinetic drug interactions.