“…No differences were found between clinical symptoms of anemia, psychological status, and AEs between groups Krafft and Breymann (2011) [ 91 ] | Hb < 8.5 g/dL 24–48 h after delivery | IS: 20 IS + ESA: 20 | 200 mg q.d., 4 days | Hb values were close to normal in both groups within 2 weeks Both treatments were well tolerated; minor side effects included metallic taste in 30% of patients and warm flush in 8% of patients |
Wågström et al (2007) [ 92 ] | Hb ≤ 80 g/dL within 72 h after delivery | IS: 15 IS + rhEPO 1: 19 IS + rhEPO 2: 15 | IS: 200 mg q.d., day 0, day 3 IS + rhEPO 1: IS 200 mg q.d., day 0, day 3 + rhEPO 10,000 U on day 0, day 3 IS + rhEPO 2: IS 200 mg q.d., day 0, day 3 + rhEPO 20,000 U on day 0, day 3 | Hb increased significantly in all three groups over time ( p < 0.001), and there were no differences between the treatment groups on any day of evaluation ( p = 0.59). The total mean increment in Hb in all subjects was 18 g/dL after 1 week and 28 g/dL after 2 weeks |
Breymann et al (2000) [ 93 ] | Hb < 10.0 g/dL | IS: 20 IS + ESA: 20 Oral iron: 20 | 200 mg q.d., 4 days | All three regimens were effective; day 7 hematocrit increases were higher with adjuvant ESA than for IS or oral iron alone: 8% versus 5% and 4%, respectively (both comparisons p < 0.01) Well tolerated |
Use of iron sucrose for general women’s health |
Krayenbuehl et al (2011) [ 94 ] | Hb ≥ 12.0 g/dL SF ≤ 50 ng/mL | IS: 43 Placebo: 47 | 200 mg q.d., 4 days | Trend for better improvement of fatigue score with IS versus placebo 21% drug-related AEs with IS (nausea, chills, headache, dizziness, chest pain, dysesthesia, dysgeusia), 7% AEs with placebo (nausea, headache, dizziness, diarrhea) |
Lee et al (2019) [ 96 ] | Menorrhagia Hb < 10 g/dL SF < 30 ng/mL | IS: 49 FCM: 52 | IS: 200 mg q.d. (≤ 600 mg/week) FCM: < 50 kg, 500 mg/week; ≥ 50 kg, 1000 mg/week | FCM was as effective as IS in achieving Hb ≥ 10 g/dL within 2 weeks after first administration (78.8% vs. 72.3%). |
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