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      Iron-chelating therapy and the treatment of thalassemia.

      Blood
      Animals, Chelation Therapy, Humans, beta-Thalassemia, drug therapy

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          Abstract

          Iron-chelating therapy with deferoxamine in patients with thalassemia major has dramatically altered the prognosis of this previously fatal disease. The successes achieved with deferoxamine, as well as the limitations of this treatment, have stimulated the design of alternative strategies of iron-chelating therapy, including orally active iron chelators. The development of the most promising of these, deferiprone, has progressed rapidly over the last 5 years; data from several trials have provided direct and supportive evidence for its short-term efficacy. At the same time, the toxicity of this agent mandates a careful evaluation of the balance between risk and benefit of deferiprone in patients with thalassemia, in most of whom long-term deferoxamine is safe and efficacious therapy.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9028304
          10.1182/blood.V89.3.739

          Chemistry
          Animals,Chelation Therapy,Humans,beta-Thalassemia,drug therapy
          Chemistry
          Animals, Chelation Therapy, Humans, beta-Thalassemia, drug therapy

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