WARNING: RENAL, HEPATIC FAILURE AND/OR GASTROINTESTINAL HEMORRHAGE
EXJADE may cause:
- Renal impairment, including failure
- Hepatic impairment, including failure
- Gastrointestinal hemorrhage
In some reported cases, these reactions were fatal. These reactions were more frequently observed in patients with advanced age, high risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), underlying renal or hepatic impairment or low platelet counts (<50 x 109/L).
EXJADE therapy requires close patient monitoring, including measurement of:
- Serum creatinine and/or creatinine clearance prior to initiation of therapy and monthly thereafter; in patients with underlying renal impairment or risk factors for renal impairment, monitor creatinine and/or creatinine clearance weekly for the first month, then monthly thereafter;
- Serum transaminases and bilirubin prior to initiation of therapy, every two weeks during the first month and monthly thereafter.
About Transfusional Iron Overload
Transfusional iron overload (or chronic iron overload due to blood transfusions) is a condition that may develop in your regularly transfused patients, as a result of the excess iron these blood transfusions carry. In these patients, regardless of disease state, transfusional excess iron will build up once the body's natural ability to safely store iron is exceeded.1
This section provides information about how chronic iron overload develops and how to identify your patients at risk.
> How Transfusional Iron Overload Develops
> Screening for Transfusional Iron Overload
Reference:
- Andrews NC. Disorders of iron metabolism. N Engl J Med. 1999;341(26):1986-1995.

