Luspatercept-aamt injection is used to treat anemia in patients with beta thalassemia who need regular red blood cell (RBC) transfusions. Luspatercept-aamt injection is also used to treat anemia in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes who need regular red blood cell (RBC) transfusions and have never received an erythropoiesis stimulating agent (ESA). Luspatercept-aamt injection is also used to treat anemia in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes with ring sideroblasts (MDS-RS) or myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasms with ring sideroblasts and thrombocytosis (MDS/MPN-RS-T) who need regular red blood cell (RBC) transfusions. This medicine is given to patients who cannot receive erythropoiesis stimulating agent (ESA) or has received ESA but did not work well. This medicine is to be given only by or under the immediate supervision of your doctor.
In deciding to use a medicine, the risks of taking the medicine must be weighed against the good it will do. This is a decision you and your doctor will make. For this medicine, the following should be considered: Tell your doctor if you have ever had any unusual or allergic reaction to this medicine or any other medicines. Also tell your health care professional if you have any other types of allergies, such as to foods, dyes, preservatives, or animals. For non-prescription products, read the label or package ingredients carefully. Appropriate studies have not been performed on the relationship of age to the effects of luspatercept-aamt injection in the pediatric population. Use in children is not recommended. Appropriate studies have not been performed on the relationship of age to the effects of luspatercept-aamt injection in the geriatric population. There are no adequate studies in women for determining infant risk when using this medication during breastfeeding. Weigh the potential benefits against the potential risks before taking this medication while breastfeeding. Although certain medicines should not be used together at all, in other cases two different medicines may be used together even if an interaction might occur. In these cases, your doctor may want to change the dose, or other precautions may be necessary. Tell your healthcare professional if you are taking any other prescription or nonprescription (over-the-counter [OTC]) medicine. Certain medicines should not be used at or around the time of eating food or eating certain types of food since interactions may occur. Using alcohol or tobacco with certain medicines may also cause interactions to occur. Discuss with your healthcare professional the use of your medicine with food, alcohol, or tobacco. The presence of other medical problems may affect the use of this medicine. Make sure you tell your doctor if you have any other medical problems, especially:
A doctor or other trained health professional will give you this medicine in a hospital. It is given as a shot under your skin once every 3 weeks. This medicine comes with a patient information leaflet. Read and follow these instructions carefully. Ask your doctor if you have any questions. Call your doctor or pharmacist for instructions.
ရှင်းလင်းချက်- သြဂုတ်လသည် ကျန်းမာရေးဆိုင်ရာအချက်အလက်များဆိုင်ရာပလက်ဖောင်းတစ်ခုဖြစ်ပြီး ၎င်း၏အဖြေများသည် ဆေးဘက်ဆိုင်ရာအကြံဉာဏ်များမဟုတ်ပါ။ မည်သည့်အပြောင်းအလဲများမပြုလုပ်မီ သင့်အနီးရှိ လိုင်စင်ရဆရာဝန်နှင့် အမြဲတိုင်ပင်ပါ။