Resources and support

The Berinert Expert Network

The Berinert Expert Network (B.E.N.™) is available toll-free 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to help:

Call B.E.N.™ toll-free 24/7 at 1-877-BEN-4HAE (1-877-236-4423)

To enroll with B.E.N.™, simply call the number above or download this form. Enrollment is open to all patients.

Assist you in initiating your Berinert therapy

  • Assist your physician with a hereditary angioedema treatment plan that is right for you
  • Connect you with a specialty pharmacy to start you on Berinert
  • Identify a hospital near you with access to Berinert
  • Provide you with a kit to help you get started on therapy

Connect you with fellow Berinert patients

  • Share experiences
  • Find help with transitioning from diagnosis to therapy
  • Get assistance in starting therapy with Berinert
  • Establish long-term connections with peers

Connect you to the HAE patient community

  • Talk to your peers with HAE through the US Hereditary Angioedema Association (HAEA)
  • Access valuable programs and services developed for you by people living with HAE
  • Find physicians who treat people living with hereditary angioedema

Help you work through insurance issues and questions

  • Address prior authorizations, coverage appeals, and letters of medical necessity

Help provide assistance through CSL Behring’s programs

Berinert Supply Guarantee Program

Guarantees that a one-year supply of Berinert will be reserved for the first 1,000 B.E.N. participants who enroll

CSL Behring AssuranceSM

Helps ensure that you can continue to receive Berinert even if you experience a lapse in your third-party, private health insurance

Patient Services Incorporated

Evaluates your financial, medical, and insurance situations to determine whether you are eligible for premium or co-pay assistance

Patient Assistance Program:

Provides medically necessary therapy to qualified individuals who are uninsured, underinsured, or unable to afford their therapy

Additonal Resources

US Hereditary Angioedema Association

Find peer-to-peer support, physician referrals, education, and patient resources.

AllAboutHAE.com

Access helpful tools and useful information about hereditary angioedema.

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Important Safety Information

Berinert®, C1 Esterase Inhibitor (Human), is for the treatment of ongoing, acute attacks of hereditary angioedema (HAE) affecting the abdomen, face or throat in adults and adolescents. The safety and efficacy of Berinert in preventing HAE attacks have not been established.

Do not use Berinert if you have experienced life-threatening allergic reactions or severe hypersensitivity to the product. Immediately report to your physician or an emergency department any signs or symptoms of allergic reactions to Berinert, including hives, chest tightness, wheezing, turning blue, fast heartbeat, and shock. Also report signs and symptoms of thrombosis that occur after infusing: including swelling and pain in the limbs or abdomen, chest pain, shortness of breath, loss of sensation or motor power, or altered consciousness or speech.

Berinert can be self-administered if you have been trained and advised to do so by your healthcare provider. Seek immediate medical attention if an HAE attack has progressed to a point where you will be unable to prepare or administer Berinert.

Call your doctor right away if swelling is not controlled after use of Berinert.

If you self-administer to treat a laryngeal attack, immediately seek medical attention afterward. If you self-administer for an abdominal attack, inform your physician so that other possible causes can be ruled out.

Because Berinert is made from human blood, the risk that it may transmit infectious agents, including viruses and, theoretically, the Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) agent, cannot be completely eliminated.

In clinical studies, the most serious adverse reaction reported in subjects who received Berinert was an increased severity of pain associated with HAE. In the placebo-controlled clinical trial, the most common adverse reaction reported more often among subjects who received Berinert than those receiving placebo was dysgeusia (a bad taste in mouth).

Berinert has not been evaluated in pregnant women or nursing mothers; inform your doctor if you are pregnant or are planning to become pregnant, or if you are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. The safety and effectiveness of Berinert have not been established in children under 12 or adults over 65 years of age.

Please see full prescribing information for Berinert, including patient product information.

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.