Abstract: | ABSTRACTIntroduction: Thrombosis is a common causal pathology for stroke, acute coronary syndrome and venous thromboembolism disorders, which are the leading cause of death worldwide. Anticoagulants have exhibited a crucial role in the prevention and treatment of thrombotic diseases. Factor Xa (FXa) is a serine protease with a central role in activating the complex blood coagulation cascade, and it is therefore regarded as an attractive target for antithrombotic agents.Areas covered: The authors review the current status of medicinal chemistry strategies for the discovery of novel FXa inhibitors and provide their expert perspectives on their future development.Expert opinion: Even if only a number of small-molecule FXa inhibitors have been reported to date, all currently available FXa inhibitors are associated with significant risk of bleeding, which may become life-threatening. There is, therefore, an urgent and unmet demand for potent novel FXa inhibitors that are potent treatments for thrombotic disorders, but which have a reduced risk of bleeding if their use is to be increasingly favored. |