Overview
Please note that this product was withdrawn from the Community Register of designated orphan medicinal products in January 2016 upon request of the marketing authorisation holder at the time of the granting of a marketing authorisation.
On 20 December 2007, orphan designation (EU/3/07/515) was granted by the European Commission to Sanofi Aventis, France, for tegafur, gimeracil, oteracil potassium for the treatment of gastric cancer.
The sponsorship was transferred to Quintiles Ireland Ltd in February 2009 and subsequently to Taiho Pharma Europe Limited, United Kingdom, in May 2009.
Cancer that originates in the stomach is called gastric cancer. These tumours are usually first discovered and diagnosed in the affected patients at an advanced stage of the disease when the tumours have spread to surrounding organs in the abdomen or other parts of the body. Symptoms of gastric cancer include loss of appetite, vomiting, weight loss, bleeding in the abdomen and subsequent anaemia. Most gastric cancers are adenocarcinomas, so called because they start in the cells that line the inside of the stomach (the mucosa). Gastric cancer is chronically debilitating and life threatening.
At the time of designation, gastric cancer affected approximately 3 in 10,000 people in the European Union (EU)*. This is equivalent to a total of around 150,000 people, and is below the threshold for orphan designation, which is 5 people in 10,000. This is based on the information provided by the sponsor and knowledge of the Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products (COMP).
*Disclaimer: For the purpose of the designation, the number of patients affected by the condition is estimated and assessed on the basis of data from the European Union (EU 27), Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein. This represents a population of 498,000,000 (Eurostat 2006).
If the tumour is diagnosed at an early stage, the cancer might be treated with surgery. Otherwise, the most common way of treating gastric cancer is through chemotherapy (using drugs to kill cancer cells). There were several medicinal products authorised for the treatment of gastric cancer in the Community at the time of orphan status designation.
Satisfactory argumentation has been submitted by the sponsor to justify the assumption that tegafur, gimeracil, oteracil potassium might be of potential significant benefit for the treatment of gastric cancer, mainly because of its new mechanism of action and because it may provide a major contribution to patient care. This assumption will have to be confirmed at the time of marketing authorisation. This will be necessary to maintain the orphan status.
Tegafur, gimeracil, oteracil potassium is a product that combines a chemotherapeutic substance (tegafur) with two modulators; gimeracil and oteracil potassium. Modulators are drugs that are designed to enhance the activity of another drug, in this case, the activity of tegafur. Tegafur is similar to a naturally occurring molecule that is a precursor to one of the building blocks of DNA (the genetic material found in every cell in the body). Without all these building blocks, cells cannot grow, divide and subsequently survive. This precursor, deoxy-uridylate, is usually modified by an enzyme (protein with catalytic activity) called thymidylate synthase, into thymidine monophosphate. According to the sponsor, tegafur acts by binding to thymidylate synthase and by inhibiting its activity, it hinders the growth of cancer cells and contributes to the destruction of the gastric tumour.
The effects of tegafur, gimeracil, oteracil potassium were evaluated in experimental models.
At the time of submission of the application for orphan designation, clinical trials in patients with gastric cancer were ongoing.
Tegafur, gimeracil, oteracil potassium was authorised for the treatment of gastric cancer in Japan and South Korea, at the time of submission. Orphan designation of tegafur, gimeracil, oteracil potassium was granted in the United States for the treatment of gastric cancer.
In accordance with Regulation (EC) No 141/2000 of 16 December 1999, the COMP adopted a positive opinion on 8 November 2007 recommending the granting of this designation.
- the seriousness of the condition;
- the existence of alternative methods of diagnosis, prevention or treatment;
- either the rarity of the condition (affecting not more than 5 in 10,000 people in the Community) or insufficient returns on investment.
Designated orphan medicinal products are products that are still under investigation and are considered for orphan designation on the basis of potential activity. An orphan designation is not a marketing authorisation. As a consequence, demonstration of quality, safety and efficacy is necessary before a product can be granted a marketing authorisation.
Key facts
- Active substance
- tegafur
- gimeracil
- oteracil potassium
- Intended use
- Treatment of gastric cancer
- Orphan designation status
- Withdrawn
- EU designation number
- EU/3/07/515
- Date of designation
- Sponsor
Taiho Pharma Europe Limited
11th Floor
Two Snowhill
Snow Hill Queensway
Birmingham B4 6WR
United Kingdom
Tel: +1 609 250 7292
E-mail: Sochalski@taihooncology.com
EMA list of opinions on orphan medicinal product designation
EMA publishes information on orphan medicinal product designation adopted by the Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products (COMP) on the IRIS online platform:
Patients' organisations
For contact details of patients’ organisations whose activities are targeted at rare diseases, see:
Orphanet, a database containing information on rare diseases, which includes a directory of patients’ organisations registered in Europe.
EU register of orphan medicines
The list of medicines that have received an orphan designation in the EU is available on the European Commission's website: