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. 2007 Sep 26;167(4):377–381. doi: 10.1007/s00431-007-0604-y

Table 2.

Comparison between iron chelators (adapted from [4])

Characteristics Deferoxamine (Desferal) Deferiprone (Ferriprox) Deferasirox (Exjade)
Route of administration Subcutaneous or intravenous Oral Oral
Half-life 20 min 2–3 h 8–16 h
Routes of iron excretion Urine/stool Urine stool
Dose range 20–60 mg/kg per day 50–60 mg/kg per day 20–30 mg/kg/day
Guidelines for monitoring therapy Audiometry and eye exams annually Complete blood count weekly; ALT level monthly for first 3–6 months then every 6 months Serum creatinine level monthly; ALT level monthly
Serum ferritin Serum ferritin Serum ferritin
Assessment of liver iron annually Assessment of liver iron annually Assessment of liver iron annually
Assessment of cardiac iron annually after 10 years of age Assessment of cardiac iron annually after 10 years of age Assessment of cardiac iron annually after 10 years of age
Advantages Long-term experience Orally active Orally active
Effective in maintaining normal or near-normal iron stores Safety profile well established Once-daily administration
Reversal of cardiac disease with intensive therapy Enhanced removal of cardiac iron Demonstrated equivalency to deferoxamine at higher doses
May be combined with deferiprone May be combined with deferoxamine Trials in several hematologic disorders
Disadvantages Requires parenteral infusion May not achieve negative iron balance in all patients at 75 mg/kg per day Limited long-term data
Ear, eye, bone toxicity Risk of agranulocytosis Need to monitor renal function
Poor compliance May not achieve negative iron balance in all patients at highest dose