Hamdan,
Is she also taking Exjade? I think the combination is needed right now, so that the iron removal goes more quickly. I don't get alarmed about upward changes in ferritin when patients are chelating well. There are reasons this happens, and although it may seem alarming, it most often isn't. As iron is removed from the organs and tissue, ferritin levels often rise. This is not meaningful, as there is actually improvement going on in the organs and this is what is most important. The iron bound to ferritin cannot do any harm. It is the free iron in organs, tissue and blood that must be addressed and this is what chelation does. Until a significant impact is made on iron stores, you will not see much reduction in ferritin. I tell patients to look at it as a two year plan, because it takes at least that long to clean the organs. However, once this goal is reached, keeping iron low becomes much easier. I do recommend combination chelation.