Evaluate
Two weeks before starting YORVIPATH, your doctor will make sure your blood calcium and vitamin D levels are within the recommended range.
Achieving your individualized YORVIPATH dose requires a process called titration. During this process, your dose is slowly adjusted based on your lab results. Your doctor will develop your titration schedule and work with you along the way.
Finding the YORVIPATH dose that works for you can take some time, so don’t get discouraged.
Two weeks before starting YORVIPATH, your doctor will make sure your blood calcium and vitamin D levels are within the recommended range.
Your doctor will start you on YORVIPATH (the recommended starting dose is 18 micrograms, once daily).
Since YORVIPATH is designed to help provide your body with the PTH it needs, your doctor will adjust your calcium and active vitamin D doses based on your lab results.
Everyone progresses at a different rate during this time.
Your individualized dose is the amount of YORVIPATH you will continue to take once your blood calcium levels are within a normal range.
A·S·A·P can help you with starting YORVIPATH, navigating insurance, and staying on track with your treatment.
Fill out the form below to receive important information about YORVIPATH. If you’d like to connect with a Patient Access Liaison (PAL) for individualized support and education about hypopara and treatment with YORVIPATH, click the “Connect with a PAL” box.
YORVIPATH is a prescription medicine used to treat adults with low parathyroid hormone (PTH) (hypoparathyroidism).
It is not known if YORVIPATH is safe and effective in people who have been recently diagnosed with hypoparathyroidism after surgery; if it is started in people with low levels of blood calcium; or in children. Do not use YORVIPATH in children and young adults whose bones are still growing.
Do not use YORVIPATH if you are allergic to palopegteriparatide or any of the other ingredients in YORVIPATH.
Tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. YORVIPATH and other medicines may affect each other causing side effects.
The most common side effects of YORVIPATH include injection site reactions, vasodilatory signs or symptoms such as a drop in blood pressure or lightheadedness when standing up, headache, diarrhea, back pain, high calcium levels, and sore throat.
These are not all of the possible side effects of YORVIPATH. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You are encouraged to report side effects to FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088 or at www.fda.gov/medwatch. You may also report side effects to Ascendis Pharma at 1-844-442-7236.
Please see the full Prescribing Information for YORVIPATH and the Medication Guide.
YORVIPATH is a prescription medicine used to treat adults with low parathyroid hormone (PTH) (hypoparathyroidism).
It is not known if YORVIPATH is safe and effective in people who have been recently diagnosed with hypoparathyroidism after surgery; if it is started in people with low levels of blood calcium; or in children. Do not use YORVIPATH in children and young adults whose bones are still growing.
Do not use YORVIPATH if you are allergic to palopegteriparatide or any of the other ingredients in YORVIPATH.
Tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. YORVIPATH and other medicines may affect each other causing side effects.
The most common side effects of YORVIPATH include injection site reactions, vasodilatory signs or symptoms such as a drop in blood pressure or lightheadedness when standing up, headache, diarrhea, back pain, high calcium levels, and sore throat.
These are not all of the possible side effects of YORVIPATH. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You are encouraged to report side effects to FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088 or at www.fda.gov/medwatch. You may also report side effects to Ascendis Pharma at 1-844-442-7236.
Please see the full Prescribing Information for YORVIPATH and the Medication Guide.
Hypopara = hypoparathyroidism.