Tenecteplase, sold under the brand name Tnkase among others, is an enzyme used as a thrombolytic drug.
Tenecteplase is a tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) produced by recombinant DNA technology using an established mammalian cell line (Chinese hamster ovary cells). Tenecteplase is a 527 amino acid glycoprotein developed by introducing the following modifications to the complementary DNA for natural human tPA: a substitution of threonine 103 with asparagine, and a substitution of asparagine 117 with glutamine, both within the kringle 1 domain, and a tetra-alanine substitution at amino acids 296–299 in the protease domain.
Tenecteplase was approved for medical use in the United States in June 2000.
Metabolism: Primarily liver
Half-life elimination: Biphasic: Initial: 20–24 minutes; Terminal: 90–130 minutes
Excretion: Clearance: Plasma: 99–119 mL/minute
The American Heart Association/American Stroke Association 2019 update to the 2018 guidelines for the Early Management of Acute Ischemic Stroke supports considering tenecteplase over alteplase in patients without contraindication to intravenous thrombolytics.
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