0521779407-23 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:24
1556 Wilson’s Disease
Treatment Options
■D-penicillamine: give vitamin B6 also
➣Initial therapy: 250–500 mg PO daily; gradually increase to 1,000–
1,500 mg daily, in 3–4 divided doses
➣Maintenance: 750–1,250 mg daily, in 3–4 divided doses
■Trientine
➣Initial therapy: 1–2 grams PO daily, in 3–4 divided doses
➣Maintenance: 750–1,000 mg daily, in 3–4 divided doses
■Zinc salts
➣Maintenance: 150 mg PO daily, in 3 divided doses
■Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate
➣Initial therapy: 120–420 mg per day for 8 weeks
➣Maintenance: use zinc salts
Side Effects & Contraindications
■D-penicillamine
➣Side effects: hypersensitivity reaction, bone marrow suppression,
proteinuria, lupus-like reaction, myasthenia, may worsen neu-
rologic symptoms, pemphigoid-type skin reaction
➣Contraindications
Absolute: history of penicillamine-related aplastic anemia or
agranulocytosis
Relative: concomitant therapy with gold salts, antimalarial or
cytotoxic drugs, oxyphenbutazone, phenylbutazone
■Trientine
➣Side effects: sideroblastic anemia, rhabdomyolysis
➣Contraindications
Absolute: known hypersensitivity
■Zinc salts
➣Side effects: gastric intolerance, headache
➣Contraindications: none
■Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate
➣Side effects: bone marrow suppression, elevation of aminotrans-
ferases
follow-up
During Treatment & Routine
■With penicillamine and trientine, aim for 24-hour urine copper >250
mcg per day or serum free copper <0.1 mg/L, checking every 3–6
months; with zinc therapy, urine copper usually <150 mcg per day &
urine zinc >1,000 mcg per day.