Search
Ferrous Fumarate Drug Information Provided by Lexi-Comp

This information has been developed and provided by an independent third-party source. Merck & Co., Inc. does not endorse and is not responsible for the accuracy of the content, or for practices or standards of non-Merck sources.

ALERT: U.S. Boxed Warning

The FDA-approved labeling includes a boxed warning. See Warnings/Precautions section for a concise summary of this information. For verbatim wording of the boxed warning, consult the product labeling or www.fda.gov.

Pronunciation

(FER us FYOO ma rate)

Generic Available (U.S.)

Yes: Tablet

Index Terms

  • Iron Fumarate

Brand Names: U.S.

  • Femiron® [OTC]
  • Ferretts® [OTC]
  • Ferro-Sequels® [OTC]
  • Ferrocite™ [OTC]
  • Hemocyte® [OTC]
  • Ircon® [OTC]

Brand Names: Canada

  • Palafer®

Pharmacologic Category

  • Iron Salt

Use: Labeled Indications

Prevention and treatment of iron-deficiency anemias

Pregnancy Considerations

It is recommended that pregnant women meet the dietary requirements of iron with diet and/or supplements in order to prevent adverse events associated with iron deficiency anemia in pregnancy. Treatment of iron deficiency anemia in pregnant women is the same as in nonpregnant women and in most cases, oral iron preparations may be used. Except in severe cases of maternal anemia, the fetus achieves normal iron stores regardless of maternal concentrations.

Lactation

Enters breast milk

Breast-Feeding Considerations

Iron is normally found in breast milk. Breast milk or iron-fortified formulas generally provide enough iron to meet the recommended dietary requirements of infants. The amount of iron in breast milk is generally not influenced by maternal iron status.

Contraindications

Hypersensitivity to iron salts or any component of the formulation; hemochromatosis, hemolytic anemia

Warnings/Precautions

Boxed Warnings:

• Pediatrics: See “Special Populations” below.

Disease-related concerns:

• Gastrointestinal disease: Avoid in patients with peptic ulcer, enteritis, or ulcerative colitis.

Special populations:

• Blood transfusion recipients: Avoid in patients receiving frequent blood transfusions.

• Elderly: Anemia in the elderly is often caused by “anemia of chronic disease” or associated with inflammation rather than blood loss. Iron stores are usually normal or increased, with a serum ferritin >50 ng/mL and a decreased total iron binding capacity. Hence, the “anemia of chronic disease” is not secondary to iron deficiency but the inability of the reticuloendothelial system to reclaim available iron stores.

• Pediatrics: [U.S. Boxed Warning]: Accidental overdose of iron-containing products is a leading cause of fatal poisoning in children under 6 years of age. Keep this product out of the reach of children. In case of accidental overdose call the poison control center immediately.

• Premature infants: Avoid use in premature infants until the vitamin E stores, deficient at birth, are replenished.

Other warnings/precautions:

• Duration of therapy: Administration of iron for >6 months should be avoided except in patients with continuous bleeding or menorrhagia.

Adverse Reactions

>10%: Gastrointestinal: Constipation, dark stools, nausea, stomach cramping, vomiting

1% to 10%:

Gastrointestinal: Diarrhea, heartburn, staining of teeth

Genitourinary: Discoloration of urine

<1%: Contact irritation

Metabolism/Transport Effects

None known.

Drug Interactions

Antacids: May decrease the absorption of Iron Salts. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Bisphosphonate Derivatives: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Bisphosphonate Derivatives. Management: Avoid administration of oral iron supplements within: 2 hours before or after tiludronate/clodronate/etidronate; 60 minutes after oral ibandronate; or 30 minutes after alendronate/risedronate. Exceptions: Pamidronate; Zoledronic Acid. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Cefdinir: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Cefdinir. Red-appearing, non-bloody stools may also develop due to the formation of an insoluble iron-cefdinir complex. Management: Avoid concurrent cefdinir and oral iron when possible. Separating doses by several hours may minimize interaction. Iron-containing infant formulas do not appear to interact with cefdinir. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Deferiprone: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Deferiprone. Management: Separate administration of deferiprone and oral medications or supplements that contain polyvalent cations by at least 4 hours. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Dimercaprol: May enhance the nephrotoxic effect of Iron Salts. Risk X: Avoid combination

Eltrombopag: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Eltrombopag. Management: Separate administration of eltrombopag and any orally administered polyvalent cation (e.g., iron-containing products) by at least 4 hours. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

H2-Antagonists: May decrease the absorption of Iron Salts. Risk C: Monitor therapy

Levodopa: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Levodopa. Only applies to oral iron preparations. Management: Consider separating doses of the agents by 2 or more hours to minimize the effects of this interaction. Monitor for decreased therapeutic effects of levodopa during concomitant therapy, particularly if doses cannot be separated. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Levothyroxine: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Levothyroxine. Management: Separate oral administration of iron salts and levothyroxine by at least 4 hours. Separation of doses is not required with parenterally administered iron salts or levothyroxine. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Methyldopa: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Methyldopa. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Pancrelipase: May decrease the absorption of Iron Salts. Risk C: Monitor therapy

PenicillAMINE: Iron Salts may decrease the absorption of PenicillAMINE. Only oral iron salts are a concern. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Phosphate Supplements: Iron Salts may decrease the absorption of Phosphate Supplements. Management: Administer oral phosphate supplements at least 1 hour before, or 2 hours after, oral iron salt administration. Exceptions: Potassium Phosphate. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Proton Pump Inhibitors: May decrease the absorption of Iron Salts. Risk C: Monitor therapy

Quinolone Antibiotics: Iron Salts may decrease the absorption of Quinolone Antibiotics. Of concern only with oral administration of both agents. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Tetracycline Derivatives: Iron Salts may decrease the absorption of Tetracycline Derivatives. Only a concern with orally administered products. Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Trientine: Iron Salts may decrease the serum concentration of Trientine. Trientine may decrease the serum concentration of Iron Salts. Management: Trientine manufacturer recommends avoiding concurrent administration with oral iron salts due to the risk for impaired GI absorption of both trientine and the iron salt. Short courses of iron may be used however separate administration by at least 2 hours Risk D: Consider therapy modification

Ethanol/Nutrition/Herb Interactions

Food: Cereals, dietary fiber, tea, coffee, eggs, and milk may decrease absorption.

Storage

Iron is a leading cause of fatal poisoning in children. Store out of children's reach and in child-resistant containers.

Mechanism of Action

Replaces iron found in hemoglobin, myoglobin, and enzymes; allows the transportation of oxygen via hemoglobin

Pharmacodynamics/Kinetics

Onset of action: Hematologic response: Oral, parenteral iron salts: ~3-10 days

Peak effect: Reticulocytosis: 5-10 days; hemoglobin values increase within 2-4 weeks

Absorption: Iron is absorbed in the duodenum and upper jejunum; in persons with normal serum iron stores, 10% of an oral dose is absorbed, this is increased to 20% to 30% in persons with inadequate iron stores. Food and achlorhydria will decrease absorption.

Protein binding: To serum transferrin

Excretion: Urine, sweat, sloughing of intestinal mucosa, and menses

Dosage

Dietary Reference Intake: Dose is RDA presented as elemental iron unless otherwise noted:

0-6 months: 0.27 mg/day (adequate intake)

7-12 months: 11 mg/day

1-3 years: 7 mg/day

4-8 years: 10 mg/day

9-13 years: 8 mg/day

14-18 years: Males: 11 mg/day; Females: 15 mg/day; Pregnant females: 27 mg/day; Lactating females: 10 mg/day

19-50 years: Males: 8 mg/day; Females: 18 mg/day; Pregnant females: 27 mg/day; Lactating females: 9 mg/day

≥50 years: 8 mg/day

Doses expressed in terms of elemental iron; elemental iron content of ferrous fumarate is 33%. Oral:

Children:

Severe iron-deficiency anemia: 4-6 mg elemental iron/kg/day in 3 divided doses

Mild-to-moderate iron-deficiency anemia: 3 mg elemental iron/kg/day in 1-2 divided doses

Prophylaxis: 1-2 mg elemental iron/kg/day

Adults:

Iron deficiency: Usual range: 150-200 mg elemental iron/day in divided doses; 60-100 mg elemental iron twice daily, up to 60 mg elemental iron 4 times/day

Prophylaxis: 60-100 mg elemental iron/day

To avoid GI upset, start with a single daily dose and increase by 1 tablet/day each week or as tolerated until desired daily dose is achieved

Elderly: Lower doses (15-50 mg elemental iron/day) may have similar efficacy and less GI adverse events (eg, nausea,constipation) as compared to higher doses (eg, 150 mg elemental iron/day) (Rimon, 2005).

Administration: Oral

Should be administered with water or juice on an empty stomach. Administer 2 hours prior to or 4 hours after antacids.

Reference Range

Serum iron:

Males: 75-175 mcg/dL (SI: 13.4-31.3 micromole/L)

Females: 65-165 mcg/dL (SI: 11.6-29.5 micromole/L)

Total iron binding capacity: 230-430 mcg/dL

Transferrin: 204-360 mg/dL

Percent transferrin saturation: 20% to 50%

Iron levels >300 mcg/dL can be considered toxic, should be treated as an overdose

Dietary Considerations

Should be taken with water or juice on an empty stomach; may be administered with food to prevent irritation; however, not with cereals, dietary fiber, tea, coffee, eggs, or milk.

Elemental iron content of ferrous fumarate: 33%

Dietary sources of iron include beans, cereal (enriched), clams, beef, lentils, liver, oysters, shrimp, and turkey. Foods that enhance dietary absorption of iron include broccoli, grapefruit, orange juice, peppers and strawberries. Foods that decrease dietary absorption of iron include coffee, dairy products, soy products, spinach, and tea.

Patient Education

May color stool black. Take between meals for maximum absorption; take with food if GI upset occurs. Do not take with milk or antacids.

Geriatric Considerations

Anemia in the elderly is often caused by “anemia of chronic disease,” a result of aging changes in the bone marrow, or associated with inflammation rather than blood loss. Iron stores are usually normal or increased, with a serum ferritin >50 ng/mL and a decreased total iron binding capacity. Hence, the anemia is not secondary to iron deficiency but the inability of the reticuloendothelial system to use available iron stores. Timed release iron preparations should be avoided due to their erratic absorption. Products combined with a laxative or stool softener should not be used unless the need for the combination is demonstrated.

Dental Health: Effects on Dental Treatment

Key adverse event(s) related to dental treatment: Staining of teeth. Do not prescribe tetracyclines simultaneously with iron since GI tract absorption of both tetracycline and iron may be inhibited.

Dental Health: Vasoconstrictor/Local Anesthetic Precautions

No information available to require special precautions

Mental Health: Effects on Mental Status

None reported

Mental Health: Effects on Psychiatric Treatment

Constipation is common; concurrent use with psychotropic agents may increase the risk

Dosage Forms

Excipient information presented when available (limited, particularly for generics); consult specific product labeling.

Tablet, oral: 324 mg [elemental iron 106 mg]

Femiron®: 63 mg [elemental iron 20 mg]

Ferretts®: 325 mg [scored; elemental iron 106 mg]

Ferrocite™: 324 mg [elemental iron 106 mg]

Hemocyte®: 324 mg [elemental iron 106 mg]

Ircon®: 200 mg [elemental iron 66 mg]

Tablet, timed release, oral:

Ferro-Sequels®: 150 mg [contains sodium benzoate; elemental iron 50 mg; with docusate sodium]

References

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, “ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 95: Anemia in Pregnancy,” Obstet Gynecol, 2008, 112(1):201-7.

Baker WF Jr, “Iron Deficiency in Pregnancy, Obstetrics, and Gynecology,” Hematol Oncol Clin North Am, 2000, 14(5):1061-77.

IOM (Institute of Medicine), Dietary Reference Intakes for Vitamin A, Vitamin K, Arsenic, Boron, Chromium, Copper, Iodine, Iron, Manganese, Molybdenum, Nickel, Silicon, Vanadium, and Zinc, Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2001.

Lipschitz DA, “The Anemia of Chronic Disease,” J Am Geriatr Soc, 1990, 38(11):1258-64.

Little DR, “Ambulatory Management of Common Forms of Anemia,” Am Fam Physician, 1999, 59(6):1598-604.

Marx JJM, “Normal Iron Absorption and Decreased Red Cell Iron Uptake in the Aged,” Blood, 1979, 53:204-11.

“Nutrition During Lactation.” Subcommittee on Nutrition During Lactation, Committee on Nutritional Status During Pregnancy and Lactation, Food and Nutrition Board Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1991. Available at http://www.nap.edu

“Recommendations to Prevent and Control Iron Deficiency in the United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,” MMWR Recomm Rep, 1998, 47(RR-3):1-29.

Rimon E, Kagansky N, Kagansky M, et al, “Are We Giving Too Much Iron? Low-Dose Iron Therapy is Effective in Octogenarians,” Am J Med, 2005, 118(10):1142-7.

“Routine Iron Supplementation During Pregnancy. Review Article. US Preventive Services Task Force,” JAMA, 1993, 270(23):2848-54.

Swain RA, Kaplan B, and Montgomery E, “Iron Deficiency Anemia,” Postgrad Med, 1996, 100(5):181-93.

International Brand Names

  • Ercofer (SE)
  • Ferraton (EC)
  • Ferrobet (AT)
  • Ferrokapsul (DE)
  • Ferroklinge (BR)
  • Ferronat (BG, CZ)
  • FerroTab (NZ)
  • Ferrum Hausmann (BE, CH, DE, LU)
  • Fersaday (GB, IE)
  • Ferumat (BE, LU, NL)
  • Ferval (MX)
  • Fumafer (FR, PT, VE)
  • Fumiron (DE)
  • Heferol (HR)
  • Hema F (TW)
  • Hierro (AR)
  • Neo-Fer (NO)
  • Rulofer N (DE)

Lexi-Comp.com

Last full review/revision March 2012

Content last modified March 2012

Back to Top
Audio
Figures
Photographs
Tables
Videos

Copyright     © 2010-2011 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A.    Privacy    Terms of Use