Overview

On 13 July 2007, Ark Therapeutics officially notified the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) that it wishes to withdraw its application for a marketing authorisation for Cerepro, for the treatment of patients with operable high-grade glioma. Cerepro was designated an orphan medicinal product on 6 February 2002.

Cerepro is a medicine containing a gene (a Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene) carried by an adenovirus. It is made up into a solution that is injected directly into the brain during surgery.

Cerepro was to be used in combination with ganciclovir sodium to treat high-grade glioma in patients who are eligible for surgery. Glioma is a type of brain tumour that begins in 'glial' cells (the cells that surround and support nerve cells).
Cerepro was intended for use during an operation. After removing as much of the brain tumour as possible, the surgeon would have made up to 70 small injections of Cerepro into the area from where the tumour was removed. Cerepro injection was to be followed by a two-week course of treatment with ganciclovir sodium, starting five days after the operation. Cerepro would only have worked in combination with ganciclovir.

Cerepro contains the gene for the enzyme 'thymidine kinase' from the herpes virus. The gene is carried within a 'vector', a type of virus that has been altered genetically so that it can carry a gene (DNA) into the cells of the body. The virus in Cerepro is an 'adenovirus' that has been engineered so that it cannot make copies of itself and therefore does not cause infections in humans.

When Cerepro is injected into the brain, the modified virus is taken up by the cells near the injection sites. The cells then start to produce the thymidine kinase enzyme. This enzyme helps to convert ganciclovir into a form which can kill cells that are dividing, including any cancerous cells that were not removed during the operation.

The effects of Cerepro were first tested in experimental models before being studied in humans.

Cerepro has also been studied in 36 patients with high-grade glioma. The study compared the effects of adding Cerepro and ganciclovir sodium to standard treatment with the effects of standard treatment alone. The main measure of effectiveness was how long the patients survived after the first operation.

The evaluation had finished and the CHMP had given a negative opinion. The company had requested a re-examination of the negative opinion, but this had not yet finished when the company withdrew.

Based on the review of the data and the company's response to the CHMP list of questions, at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP had given a negative opinion and did not recommend a marketing authorisation for Cerepro for the treatment of patients with operable high-grade glioma.

The CHMP had concerns that a benefit of Cerepro had not yet been shown. It was concerned over the low number of patients included in the main study of Cerepro, which prevented a benefit of the medicine being demonstrated. The Committee also had concerns over the ways in which the study had been carried out, which made it difficult to interpret the results. In addition, the CHMP considered there to be insufficient information on the safety of Cerepro, and, since the benefits of the medicine had not been demonstrated, that its risks, when used in combination with ganciclovir, could be of concern.

Therefore, at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP's view was that a benefit of Cerepro had not been sufficiently demonstrated and any benefits did not outweigh the identified risks.

The letter from the company notifying the EMEA of the withdrawal of the application is available under the tab 'All documents'.

The company informed the CHMP that there are no consequences for patients currently included in clinical trials with Cerepro. If you are in a clinical trial and need more information about your treatment, contact the doctor who is giving it to you.

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Key facts

Name of medicine
Cerepro
Active substance
adenovirus-mediated Herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase gene
Therapeutic area (MeSH)
Glioma
EMA product number
EMEA/H/C/000694

Orphan

<p>This medicine was designated an orphan medicine. This means that it was developed for use against a rare, life-threatening or chronically debilitating condition or, for economic reasons, it would be unlikely to have been developed without incentives. For more information, see <a href="/node/69983">Orphan designation</a>.</p>
Marketing authorisation applicant
Ark Therapeutics
Withdrawal of application
13/07/2007

All Documents

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