Genentech® Transplant Access Services
Have questions about your CellCept prescription coverage? This free, easy-to-use service can help you and your healthcare providers get answers to questions about your prescription drug coverage for CellCept.
CellCept® (mycophenolate mofetil) is a medicine given by prescription to people who had a kidney, heart or liver transplant. CellCept can help prevent rejection of the new organ.
Your body's immune system can tell that the new heart, liver or kidney is different and tries to reject it. CellCept is taken along with other anti-rejection medicines to help control your immune system. They help keep it from rejecting the transplant.
Follow your doctor's exact orders for taking CellCept and all other medicines.
Pregnant women who take CellCept have a higher chance of losing the baby during the first 3 months of pregnancy. There also is a higher chance the baby will have birth defects.
If you are a woman who can get pregnant, you must use 2 different reliable methods of birth control 4 weeks prior to starting and during CellCept therapy, and continue birth control for 6 weeks after you stop taking CellCept.
If you plan to become pregnant, talk with your doctor. You and your doctor can decide if other medicines to prevent rejection may be right for you.
Taking CellCept with other anti-rejection medicines may raise your chance of getting an infection. It may raise your chance of getting cancer of the immune system (lymphoma) or other cancers, such as skin cancer. Talk with your doctor right away if you have any signs of infection such as fever, tiredness, headache, redness of skin/wound or swollen lymph glands. Tell your doctor about any changes in your skin.
CellCept weakens the body's immune system and affects your ability to fight infections. Serious infections, possibly leading to death, can happen with CellCept. Types of infections can include:
Brain infection called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). PML can be fatal. Symptoms include clumsiness, weakness that keeps getting worse, not being able to move or use one side of the body, and changes in vision, speech or personality.
Viral infections. Certain viruses can live in your body and cause active infections when your immune system is weak. These may include:
BK virus. This infection can damage the kidney. It can cause the new kidney to fail.
Cytomegalovirus (CMV). CMV can cause serious tissue and blood infections.
CellCept® (mycophenolate mofetil) is a medicine given by prescription to people who had a kidney, heart or liver transplant. CellCept can help prevent rejection of the new organ.
Your body's immune system can tell that the new heart, liver or kidney is different and tries to reject it. CellCept is taken along with other anti-rejection medicines to help control your immune system. They help keep it from rejecting the transplant.
Follow your doctor's exact orders for taking CellCept and all other medicines.
Have questions about your CellCept prescription coverage? This free, easy-to-use service can help you and your healthcare providers get answers to questions about your prescription drug coverage for CellCept.
Each health insurance plan has its own coverage guidance and policies. Our reimbursement experts will review your insurance benefits to determine:
This service is available Monday through Friday, 9:00 AM to 7:00 PM Eastern Standard Time.
Please remember to have your personal insurance information available when you call. Reimbursement experts will have a completed benefit investigation sent to you within 2 business days.
While we hope to provide helpful information, Genentech makes no representations about the eligibility or guarantee of coverage or reimbursement for any particular claim. Genentech cannot guarantee success in obtaining third-party insurance reimbursement. Third-party coverage and payment for medical products and services are complex and affected by numerous factors. It is always a provider's responsibility to determine and submit the appropriate codes, charges and modifiers for services that are rendered. Providers should contact third-party payors for specific information on their coding, coverage and payment policies. All coding and claims used by a provider in seeking reimbursement must be accurate, complete and adequately documented in the applicable patient record. All services must be medically appropriate.
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