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Hizentra materials

CSL Behring provides several resources designed to help you and your patients learn more about primary immunodeficiency disease (PIDD) and Hizentra.

Resources for you and your practice

Injection-Site Reaction Card
A reference card to help manage patient expectations about injection-site reactions, and provide troubleshooting tips for infusion.

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IgIQ Resource Center Brochure
A guide to IgIQ, a support center that manages Ig product-related information and assists with enrollment in CSL Behring support programs.

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Hizentra Coding Guide
A guide to diagnostic and billing codes for Hizentra.

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10 Warning Signs of Primary Immunodeficiency
A list detailing the 10 main warning signs of PIDD, created by the Jeffrey Modell Foundation.

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Resources for your patients

Hizentra Patient Brochure
Information for patients and caregivers about primary immunodeficiency disease and Hizentra.

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IgIQ Resource Center Brochure
A guide to IgIQ, a support center that manages Ig product-related information and assists with enrollment in CSL Behring support programs.

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Hizentra Step-by-Step Infusion Guide
A reference guide that details the 11 steps for properly infusing Hizentra.

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Hizentra Therapy Journal
A 52-week journal that allows patients to log their infusions and other important information about treatment with Hizentra.

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Hizentra Starter Journal
A journal designed to help patients start Hizentra therapy, log infusions, and keep track of their therapy.

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Self-Administration DVD
A DVD for patients that demonstrates how to properly self-administer Hizentra, after training from a healthcare professional.

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Hizentra Patient Starter Kit
A box of materials for patients starting Hizentra therapy which includes the Hizentra patient brochure, informational DVD, step by step infusion guide, starter therapy journal and reply card for registration in the Voice2Voice program.

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Adult Therapy Kit
A Hizentra starter kit for adults, which includes a travel bag to hold supplies, an infusion placemat, and a 52-week therapy journal.

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Child Therapy Kit
A Hizentra starter kit for caregivers of children with PIDD, which includes a travel bag to hold supplies, an infusion placemat, a 52-week therapy journal, a therapeutic play pack, and an "Our Immune System" storybook.

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Find assistance and support

CSL Behring offers several programs designed to support you and your patients.

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Important Safety Information

Immune Globulin Subcutaneous (Human), Hizentra®, is indicated as replacement therapy for patients with primary humoral immunodeficiency (PI), age 2 and older. This includes but is not limited to the humoral immune defect in congenital agammaglobulinemia, common variable immunodeficiency, X-linked agammaglobulinemia, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, and severe combined immunodeficiencies.

Hizentra is contraindicated in patients with a history of anaphylactic or severe systemic reaction to human immune globulin preparations or components of Hizentra, such as polysorbate 80. Because it contains the stabilizer L-proline, Hizentra is contraindicated in patients with hyperprolinemia. Hizentra is also contraindicated in patients with immunoglobulin A deficiency who have antibodies against IgA and a history of hypersensitivity.

Hizentra should be administered subcutaneously only. Do not administer intravenously.

IgA-deficient patients with anti-IgA antibodies may be at greater risk of developing potentially severe hypersensitivity and anaphylactic reactions with administration of Hizentra. If hypersensitivity occurs or anaphylactic reactions are suspected, discontinue administration immediately and treat as medically appropriate.

Hizentra is derived from human plasma. The risk of transmission of infectious agents, including viruses and, theoretically, the Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) agent, cannot be completely eliminated.

The most common drug-related adverse reactions (observed in 5% or more of study subjects receiving Hizentra) were local reactions (ie, swelling, redness, heat, pain, and itching at the injection site), headache, diarrhea, fatigue, back pain, nausea, extremity pain, cough, rash, pruritis, vomiting, upper abdominal pain, pain, and migraine.

Monitor patients for thrombotic events and aseptic meningitis (AMS), which have been reported with SCIg. Also look forreactions reported to occur with IVIg treatment that might also occur with Hizentra, including renal dysfunction/failure, hemolysis, and transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI).

Ig administration can transiently impair the efficacy of live attenuated virus vaccines, such as measles, mumps and rubella. It can also lead to misinterpretation of serologic testing.

Please see full prescribing information for Hizentra.