← Return to Anyone use Neulasta OnPro to help with low white blood cells?

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It is a wonderful device called an OnPro. It is not a patch; it is a small device that adheres to the upper arm and has a small needle inside which emerges to inject the Neulasta. My husband had one attached after each chemo infusion, and it automatically injected the medication 26 or 27 hours after the infusion. It was great for us, in that it saved us a second long drive to the infusion center.

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Replies to "It is a wonderful device called an OnPro. It is not a patch; it is a..."

@lag “what she said”. Only side effect was really deep-feeling bone pain. My oncologist gave me Loratadine (an antihistamine) to prevent that. My experience was that taking the first one right before the Neulasta did not work but taking the first one earlier by 12-15 hrs worked great. I think I recall taking that early one and also the one as directed so I got a sorta loading dose. Oncologist ok’d it and I had no more bone pain.