ferric-oxide--saccharated has been researched along with Anaphylaxis* in 11 studies
1 review(s) available for ferric-oxide--saccharated and Anaphylaxis
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[Safety aspects of parenteral iron supplementation therapies in patients with chronic kidney disease].
Iron deficiency often occurs in patients with chronic kidney disease and can be effectively treated with parenteral supplementation of iron. In these patients, prompt application of iron therapy can help to reduce the dependence of erythropoietin-stimulating agents and effectively treat anemia. Correct evaluation of iron metabolism in CKD patients can be difficult. Duration of and response to therapy should always be considered while planning parenteral supplementation of iron. The main safety aspects of parenteral iron preparations relate to their possible anaphylactic potential and the potential induction of oxidative stress due to the release of free iron. However, parenteral iron supplementation is usually safe and without major side effects. Regarding current data, none of the iron preparations is showing definitive superiority. Although uncommon, iron preparations containing dextran can lead to severe side effects, therefore these preparations appear to have an inferior safety profile. Due to limited data, a comparison of third-generation iron preparations with previous preparations is not possible. Recently, for the first time, the third generation iron preparation ferumoxytol has been directly compared to iron sucrose. From this data and others, it remains unclear whether third generation iron preparations show safety-relevant superiority. Topics: Administration, Oral; Anaphylaxis; Anemia, Iron-Deficiency; Disaccharides; Ferric Compounds; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Ferrosoferric Oxide; Glucaric Acid; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Iron Compounds; Iron-Dextran Complex; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Maltose; Oxidative Stress; Renal Dialysis | 2013 |
2 trial(s) available for ferric-oxide--saccharated and Anaphylaxis
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Administration of intravenous iron sucrose as a 2-minute push to CKD patients: a prospective evaluation of 2,297 injections.
Intravenous iron supplementation is an integral part of the management of anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease. Traditionally, this has been administered as an infusion over 1 or more hours, which requires the use of intravenous fluids and administration tubing, along with extra demands on patient and nursing time.. We prospectively investigated the safety and practicality of administering iron sucrose, 200 mg, as a bolus injection over 2 minutes in patients with chronic kidney disease. A total of 2,297 injections were administered to 657 patients. Any adverse events were recorded, including acute anaphylactoid reactions to the iron injection, along with the presence or absence of metallic taste and phlebitis, and these were classified as "serious" and "nonserious.". The most common adverse event was a mild and transient metallic taste that occurred during 412 injections (17.9%); in no case was this of significant distress to the patient. Excluding this, 2,240 injections (97.5%) proceeded uneventfully, and no case of phlebitis was recorded. Adverse events other than metallic taste were recorded in association with 57 injections (2.5%). Seven of these were caused by an acute anaphylactoid reaction to the intravenous iron. All 7 acute reactions resolved completely within 30 minutes with no sequelae, and none required hospitalization. The remaining 50 adverse events consisted of pain during the injection (n = 31), pain after the injection with or without some bruising (n = 9), nausea/gastrointestinal symptoms (n = 3), lethargy (n = 4), and lightheadedness (n = 3).. Administration of 200 mg of iron sucrose as an intravenous bolus injection over 2 minutes is a practical dosing regimen in patients with chronic kidney disease, resulting in considerable savings in time and cost. Topics: Adult; Aged; Anaphylaxis; Anemia, Hypochromic; Chronic Disease; Cohort Studies; Dysgeusia; Erythropoietin; Female; Ferric Compounds; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Glucaric Acid; Graft Rejection; Humans; Hypotension; Injections, Intravenous; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Transplantation; Male; Middle Aged; Peritoneal Dialysis; Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory; Prospective Studies | 2005 |
A study for the evaluation of safety and tolerability of intravenous high-dose iron sucrose in patients with iron deficiency anemia due to gastrointestinal bleeding.
The provision of adequate iron to support erythropoiesis in iron deficient patients is a time-consuming process which may present compliance problems for patients in the outpatient setting. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the safety and tolerability of intravenous high-dose iron sucrose therapy specifically in patients with iron deficiency anemia (IDA) due to gastrointestinal blood loss.. A single dose of iron sucrose of 7 mg iron/kg body weight (not exceeding 500 mg) was infused over 3.5 hours in 31 consecutive patients with IDA due to gastrointestinal blood loss. Safety and tolerability of the therapy was assessed by the occurrence of adverse events under therapy and up to one week after completion of the study. Further examinations comprised vital parameters, ECG, and clinical chemistry including iron indices.. A total of 14 adverse events were observed in 10 patients, of which two adverse events in two patients were considered as being definitely related to drug administration. None of the patients had to be withdrawn from therapy. Significant changes in vital parameters and ECG during therapy and follow-up were not observed and clinical chemistry remained unchanged.. A single intravenous high-dose iron sucrose therapy in patients with IDA due to gastrointestinal blood loss appears to be safe and therefore is a therapeutic option which may save time and improve patient compliance. Topics: Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anaphylaxis; Anemia, Iron-Deficiency; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Tolerance; Edema; Female; Ferric Compounds; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage; Glucaric Acid; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Male; Middle Aged; Nausea; Thrombophlebitis; Treatment Outcome; Urticaria | 2004 |
8 other study(ies) available for ferric-oxide--saccharated and Anaphylaxis
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Risks for Anaphylaxis With Intravenous Iron Formulations : A Retrospective Cohort Study.
The risks for anaphylaxis among intravenous (IV) iron products currently in use have not been assessed.. To compare risks for anaphylaxis among 5 IV iron products that are used frequently.. Retrospective cohort study using a target trial emulation framework.. Medicare fee-for-service data with Part D coverage between July 2013 and December 2018.. Older adults receiving their first administration of IV iron.. The primary outcome was the occurrence of anaphylaxis within 1 day of IV iron administration, ascertained using a validated case definition. Analysis was adjusted for 40 baseline covariates using inverse probability of treatment weighting. The adjusted incidence rates (IRs) for anaphylaxis per 10 000 first administrations and odds ratios (ORs) were computed.. The adjusted IRs for anaphylaxis per 10 000 first administrations were 9.8 cases (95% CI, 6.2 to 15.3 cases) for iron dextran, 4.0 cases (CI, 2.5 to 6.6 cases) for ferumoxytol, 1.5 cases (CI, 0.3 to 6.6 cases) for ferric gluconate, 1.2 cases (CI, 0.6 to 2.5 cases) for iron sucrose, and 0.8 cases (CI, 0.3 to 2.6 cases) for ferric carboxymaltose. Using iron sucrose as the referent category, the adjusted ORs for anaphylaxis were 8.3 (CI, 3.5 to 19.8) for iron dextran and 3.4 (CI, 1.4 to 8.3) for ferumoxytol. When cohort entry was restricted to the period after withdrawal of high-molecular-weight iron dextran from the U.S. market in 2014, the risk for anaphylaxis associated with low-molecular-weight iron dextran (OR, 8.4 [CI, 2.8 to 24.7]) did not change appreciably. Anaphylactic reactions requiring hospitalizations were observed only among patients using iron dextran or ferumoxytol.. Generalizability to non-Medicare populations.. The rates of anaphylaxis were very low with all IV iron products but were 3- to 8-fold greater for iron dextran and ferumoxytol than for iron sucrose.. None. Topics: Aged; Anaphylaxis; Cohort Studies; Dextrans; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Ferrosoferric Oxide; Humans; Iron; Iron-Dextran Complex; Medicare; Retrospective Studies; United States | 2022 |
In older adults, iron dextran and ferumoxytol each had higher anaphylaxis risk at ≤1 d than iron sucrose.
Dave CV, Brittenham GM, Carson JL, et al. Topics: Aged; Anaphylaxis; Anemia, Iron-Deficiency; Dextrans; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Ferrosoferric Oxide; Humans; Iron; Iron-Dextran Complex; Retrospective Studies | 2022 |
Frequency and Associated Costs of Anaphylaxis- and Hypersensitivity-Related Adverse Events for Intravenous Iron Products in the USA: An Analysis Using the US Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System.
Intravenous iron preparations rapidly correct iron deficiency anemia, with the notable drug class effect of rare, yet potentially life-threatening, administration-related hypersensitivity or anaphylactic reactions. The objective of this comparative study was to assess adverse events associated with four intravenous iron preparations and estimated medical costs, in the US Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database.. Cases of hypersensitivity reactions and anaphylaxis/anaphylactic shock associated with iron dextran, iron sucrose, ferumoxytol, and ferric carboxymaltose, spontaneously reported to FAERS (1 January, 2014 to 31 December, 2019), were extracted. The reporting odds ratio lower bound 90% confidence interval (ROR05) > 1 and cases ≥ 5 defined a likely signal for a drug-adverse event association. Adverse event-associated medical costs were estimated using Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality/Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project 2016 data.. For hypersensitivity reactions, ferumoxytol and iron dextran had the highest ROR05 values (5.00 and 4.35, respectively) and greatest proportions of associated deaths (7.1% and 5.3%), followed by iron sucrose (ROR05 3.94, deaths 2.4%), and ferric carboxymaltose (ROR05 3.03, deaths 0.2%). For anaphylaxis/anaphylactic shock, ROR05 for cases/deaths were: 39.32/13.4%, ferumoxytol; 37.80/4.5%, iron dextran; 17.60/4.7%, iron sucrose; and 8.77/no deaths, ferric carboxymaltose. Downstream medical costs per adverse event were highest with iron dextran (US$8615) and ferumoxytol (US$8164), followed by iron sucrose (US$4212), and ferric carboxymaltose (US$1832).. Reporting rates of hypersensitivity and anaphylaxis with intravenous iron preparations were highest with ferumoxytol and lowest with ferric carboxymaltose in the US FAERS database. Adverse event-related medical costs were highest for iron dextran and ferumoxytol, and lowest for ferric carboxymaltose. Topics: Anaphylaxis; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Humans; Iron; Iron-Dextran Complex; United States; United States Food and Drug Administration | 2021 |
Comment on: Frequency and Associated Costs of Anaphylaxis- and Hypersensitivity-Related Adverse Events for Intravenous Iron Products in the USA: An Analysis Using the US Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System.
Topics: Anaphylaxis; Drug Hypersensitivity; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Humans; Iron; United States; United States Food and Drug Administration | 2021 |
Authors' Reply to Michael Auerbach's Comment on: "Frequency and Associated Costs of Anaphylaxis- and Hypersensitivity-Related Adverse Events for Intravenous Iron Products in the USA: An Analysis Using the US Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Repo
Topics: Anaphylaxis; Drug Hypersensitivity; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Humans; Iron; United States; United States Food and Drug Administration | 2021 |
Comparative Risk of Anaphylactic Reactions Associated With Intravenous Iron Products.
All intravenous (IV) iron products are associated with anaphylaxis, but the comparative safety of each product has not been well established.. To compare the risk of anaphylaxis among marketed IV iron products.. Retrospective new user cohort study of IV iron recipients (n = 688,183) enrolled in the US fee-for-service Medicare program from January 2003 to December 2013. Analyses involving ferumoxytol were limited to the period January 2010 to December 2013.. Administrations of IV iron dextran, gluconate, sucrose, or ferumoxytol as reported in outpatient Medicare claims data.. Anaphylaxis was identified using a prespecified and validated algorithm defined with standard diagnosis and procedure codes and applied to both inpatient and outpatient Medicare claims. The absolute and relative risks of anaphylaxis were estimated, adjusting for imbalances among treatment groups.. A total of 274 anaphylaxis cases were identified at first exposure, with an additional 170 incident anaphylaxis cases identified during subsequent IV iron administrations. The risk for anaphylaxis at first exposure was 68 per 100,000 persons for iron dextran (95% CI, 57.8-78.7 per 100,000) and 24 per 100,000 persons for all nondextran IV iron products combined (iron sucrose, gluconate, and ferumoxytol) (95% CI, 20.0-29.5 per 100,000) , with an adjusted odds ratio (OR) of 2.6 (95% CI, 2.0-3.3; P < .001). At first exposure, when compared with iron sucrose, the adjusted OR of anaphylaxis for iron dextran was 3.6 (95% CI, 2.4-5.4); for iron gluconate, 2.0 (95% CI 1.2, 3.5); and for ferumoxytol, 2.2 (95% CI, 1.1-4.3). The estimated cumulative anaphylaxis risk following total iron repletion of 1000 mg administered within a 12-week period was highest with iron dextran (82 per 100,000 persons, 95% CI, 70.5- 93.1) and lowest with iron sucrose (21 per 100,000 persons, 95% CI, 15.3- 26.4).. Among patients in the US Medicare nondialysis population with first exposure to IV iron, the risk of anaphylaxis was highest for iron dextran and lowest for iron sucrose. Topics: Aged; Anaphylaxis; Female; Ferric Compounds; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Ferrosoferric Oxide; Glucaric Acid; Gluconates; Humans; Incidence; Injections, Intravenous; Iron-Dextran Complex; Male; Medicare Part A; Retrospective Studies; Risk; United States | 2015 |
Differences in spontaneously reported hypersensitivity and serious adverse events for intravenous iron preparations: comparison of Europe and North America.
Spontaneously-reported rates of adverse events (AEs) of intravenous (i.v.) iron products have not been compared since 2007. AEs in Europe (Eur) and North America (NA) have never been compared. New products have been marketed and many changes in prescribing habits have occurred since then, and the effect on AEs reporting is unclear. It was hypothesized that changing practices for i.v. iron products has caused changes in the rates of serious AEs and large differences exist between Eur and NA. Rates of AEs for three i.v. iron preparations (iron sucrose [IS], ferric gluconate [FG] and high and low MW iron dextran [HMWID, LMWID]) were compared by product and continent from January 1, 2003 to June 30, 2009 for selected countries in Eur and NA, using the Uppsala Monitoring Center's database. Rates of total, anaphylaxis and other serious allergic AEs were calculated as number of AEs divided by i.v. iron sales standardized to 100 mg dose equivalents (DEq) of iron. Quarterly sales (millions of 100 mg DEq of iron) increased from the first quarter 2003 to the end of the second quarter of 2009 by 1% for FG, 16% for IS and 2% for ID. Total AEs for NA plus Eur were similar for FG and IS, but total AEs were 6- to 7-fold higher for ID. Rates of anaphylaxis were 6- to 11-fold higher in Eur plus NA combined for ID than for IS or FG. In NA, there were substantially higher reports for total, anaphylaxis and other serious allergic AEs with FG compared to IS, whereas the reverse was the case in Eur. Odds ratios (OR) showed higher risks of anaphylaxis with FG in NA vs. Eur (OR = 4.40, P < 0.0001) and lower risks with IS (OR = 0.24, P < 0.0001). Odds of anaphylaxis with LMWID in Eur vs. FG and IS were 42.08 and 16.92 (both P < 0.0001), respectively. In NA, odds of anaphylaxis with ID vs. FG and IS were 2.36 and 17.73 (both P < 0.0001), respectively. Differences between NA and Eur may be related to varied treatment practices. ID had the highest rates of all types of AEs, and IS and FG had a continued trend for lowest rates of AEs. Topics: Anaphylaxis; Drug Hypersensitivity; Europe; Ferric Compounds; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Glucaric Acid; Humans; Injections, Intravenous; Iron Compounds; Iron-Dextran Complex; North America; Odds Ratio; United States; United States Food and Drug Administration | 2011 |
Hypersensitivity reactions and deaths associated with intravenous iron preparations.
Parenteral iron therapy is an accepted adjunctive management of anaemia in kidney disease. Newer agents may have fewer severe hypersensitivity adverse events (AE) compared with iron dextrans (ID). The rate of type 1 AE to iron sucrose (IS) and sodium ferric gluconate (SFG) relative to ID is unclear. We used the US Food and Drug Administration's Freedom of Information (FOI) surveillance database to compare the type 1 AE profiles for the three intravenous iron preparations available in the United States.. We tabulated reports received by the FOI database between January 1997 and September 2002, and calculated 100 mg dose equivalents for the treated population for each agent. We developed four clinical categories describing hypersensitivity AE (anaphylaxis, anaphylactoid reaction, urticaria and angioedema) and an algorithm describing anaphylaxis, for specific analyses.. All-event reporting rates were 29.2, 10.5 and 4.2 reports/million 100 mg dose equivalents, while all-fatal-event reporting rates were 1.4, 0.6 and 0.0 reports/million 100 mg dose equivalents for ID, SFG and IS, respectively. ID had the highest reporting rates in all four clinical categories and the anaphylaxis algorithm. SFG had intermediate reporting rates for urticaria, anaphylactoid reaction and the anaphylaxis algorithm, and a zero reporting rate for the anaphylaxis clinical category. IS had either the lowest or a zero reporting rate in all clinical categories/algorithm.. These findings confirm a higher risk for AE, especially serious type 1 reactions, with ID therapy than with newer intravenous iron products and also suggest that IS carries the lowest risk for hypersensitivity reactions. Topics: Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems; Algorithms; Anaphylaxis; Drug Hypersensitivity; Ferric Compounds; Ferric Oxide, Saccharated; Glucaric Acid; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Iron-Dextran Complex; Retrospective Studies; Severity of Illness Index; Sucrose; United States | 2005 |