| Literature DB >> 22792466 |
Alhossain A Khalafallah1, Amanda E Dennis.
Abstract
Nutritional iron-deficiency anaemia (IDA) is the most common disorder in the world, affecting more than two billion people. The World Health Organization's global database on anaemia has estimated a prevalence of 14% based on a regression-based analysis. Recent data show that the prevalence of IDA in pregnant women in industrialized countries is 17.4% while the incidence of IDA in developing countries increases significantly up to 56%. Although oral iron supplementation is widely used for the treatment of IDA, not all patients respond adequately to oral iron therapy. This is due to several factors including the side effects of oral iron which lead to poor compliance and lack of efficacy. The side effects, predominantly gastrointestinal discomfort, occur in a large cohort of patients taking oral iron preparations. Previously, the use of intravenous iron had been associated with undesirable and sometimes serious side effects and therefore was underutilised. However, in recent years, new type II and III iron complexes have been developed, which offer better compliance and toleration as well as high efficacy with a good safety profile. In summary, intravenous iron can be used safely for a rapid repletion of iron stores and correction of anaemia during and after pregnancy.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22792466 PMCID: PMC3389687 DOI: 10.1155/2012/630519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pregnancy ISSN: 2090-2727
Recently available intravenous (IV) iron preparations.
| Name of the IV iron preparation | Status of registration | Indications | Test dose | Duration of infusion | Max dose in single infusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ∗Ferumoxytol (Feraheme, AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc., USA) | FDA approved | Treatment of iron-deficiency anaemia in adult patients with CKD** | None | 1 minute | 510 mg | [ |
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| ∗ Ferric carboxymaltose (Ferinject, Vifor Pharma, Glattbrugg, Switzerland) | Approved in Europe,FDA-approval is sought | Treatment of iron-deficiency anaemia in adult patients | None | 15 minutes | 20 mg/kg with max dose of 1000 mg | [ |
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| ∗ Iron isomaltoside (MonoFer, Pharmacosmos A/S, Holbaek, Denmark) | Approved in Europe FDA-approval is sought | Treatment of iron-deficiency anaemia in adult patients with CKD** | None | 60 minutes | No max dose given at rate of 20 mg/kg | [ |
FDA, Food and Drug Administration; CKD, chronic kidney disease; Max, maximum. ∗No available data in pregnancy; however, if the benefit of treatment is judged to outweigh the potential risk to the fetus, the treatment should be confined to second and third trimester of pregnancy. ∗∗Extended approval is sought.
Comparison of costs of different oral and IV iron preparations.
| Product | Scientific name | Route of | Elemental iron/ | Approximate cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| /manufacturer | administration | recommended dose | ||
| Ferro-Liquid (AFT Pharmaceuticals) | Ferrous sulphate | Oral liquid 250 mL (30 mg/5 mL) | 90 mg/15 mL/day | $19.35 per bottle |
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| Ferro-Tab (AFT Pharmaceuticals) | Ferrous fumarate200 mg | Oral tablet 60 tabs | 67.5 mg/day | $11.62 per package |
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| FGF (Abbott) | Ferrous sulfate 250 mg (+ folic acid) | Oral tablet 30 tabs | 80 mg/day | $7 per package |
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| Fefol (Pharmacare Laboratories) | Ferrous sulfate 270 mg (+ folic acid) | Oral tablet 30 tabs | 87 mg/day | $9.95 per package |
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| Ferro-F-Tab (AFT Pharmaceuticals) | Ferrous fumarate 310 mg (+ folic acid) | Oral tablet 60 tabs | 100 mg/day | $12.79 per package |
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| Ferrograd C (Abbott) | Ferrous sulfate 325 mg | Oral tablet 30 tabs | 105 mg/day | $8.16 per package |
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| Ferro-gradumet (Abbott) | Ferrous sulfate 325 mg | Oral tablet 30 tabs | 105 mg/day | $6.56 per package |
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| Intravenous iron | ||||
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| Ferrum-H (Vifor Pharma Pty Ltd) | Iron polymaltose | IV 100 mg ampule | No maximum (Max) dose at a single administration | $49.57 for 5 × 100 mg |
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| Ferrosig (Sigma Pharmaceuticals) | Iron polymaltose 100 mg ampoule | IV 100 mg ampoule | No max dose at a single administration | $49.57 for 5 × 100 mg |
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| Venofer (Aspen Pharmacare) | Iron sucrose | IV 100 mg ampule | Max single dose 300 mg | $139.48 for 5 × 100 mg |
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| Ferinject (Vifor) | Ferric carboxymaltose | IV 100 mg and 500 mg ampules | Max single dose 1000 mg | 100 mg: $35/vial |
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| MonoFer, (Pharmacosmos) | Iron isomaltoside | IV 100 mg ampule | No max dose at a single administration | Not available |
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| Feraheme, (AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) | Ferumoxytol | IV 100 mg ampule | Max single dose 510 mg | Not available |
Cost is based on Pharmaceutical Benefit Scheme (PBS) listing price in Australia in AUD which is equivalent to USD (1:1) at the time of analysis. However the prices are only approximate as there is considerable variability depending on purchasing situation or country of origin.
Figure 1Proposed treatment for anaemia in pregnancy and postpartum period based on different randomized and non-randomized trials [7, 25, 30, 41, 42, 52–55].