Skip to main content
European Medicines Agency's logo Go to homepage

Main navigation

  • Medicines
    • Find medicine
    • Therapeutic areas: latest updates
    • Download medicine data
    • What we publish on medicines and when
    • Medicines under evaluation
    • National registers
  • Human regulatory
    • Overview
    • Research and development
    • Marketing authorisation
    • Post-authorisation
    • Medical devices
    • Herbal products
  • Veterinary regulatory
    • Overview
    • Research and development
    • Marketing authorisation
    • Post-authorisation
  • Committees
    • Overview
    • How the committees work
    • CHMP
    • CVMP
    • PRAC
    • COMP
    • HMPC
    • CAT
    • PDCO
    • Working parties and other groups
  • News & events
    • Overview
    • News
    • Events
    • What's new
    • Committee highlights
    • Publications
    • Press and social media
    • Open consultations
    • RSS feeds
  • Partners & networks
    • Overview
    • EU partners
    • International activities
    • Patients and consumers
    • Healthcare professionals
    • Pharmaceutical industry
    • Networks
    • Health technology assessment bodies
  • About us
    • Overview
    • What we do
    • Who we are
    • How we work
    • Fees
    • Support to SMEs
    • Annual reports and work programmes
    • History of EMA
    • Careers
    • Procurement
    • Glossaries
    • About this website
    • Data protection and privacy
    • Contacts
  1. Home
  2. Medicines
  3. Qtern - withdrawal of application for variation to marketing authorisation

Qtern - withdrawal of application for variation to marketing authorisation

Application withdrawn

The application for a change to this medicine's authorisation has been withdrawn.

saxagliptin / dapagliflozin
Post-authorisationHuman

Page contents

  • Overview
  • Key facts
  • Documents
  • Related information on withdrawals
  • News on Qtern
  • More information on Qtern

Overview

On 3 April 2018, AstraZeneca AB officially notified the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) that it wished to withdraw its application to extend the approved use of Qtern in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

Qtern is a diabetes medicine that is already used in adults with type 2 diabetes to improve control of their blood glucose (sugar) levels. It contains the active substances saxagliptin and dapagliflozin.

Qtern is used in patients in whom treatment with a combination of several other diabetes medicines (metformin and/or a sulfonylurea plus either saxagliptin or dapagliflozin) is not working well enough. It is also used to replace saxagliptin and dapagliflozin given as separate tablets.

Qtern has been authorised in the EU since July 2016.

Qtern was also expected to be used earlier in treatment when metformin with or without a sulfonylurea is not working well enough and adding another oral medicine (like one of the ingredients of Qtern) is unlikely to help.

One of its active substances, dapagliflozin, blocks the effect of a protein in the kidney called SGLT2 that retains glucose in the body. Blocking this causes more glucose to be removed in the urine, thereby reducing the levels of glucose in the blood. The other active substance, saxagliptin, blocks the breakdown of hormones called incretins. By increasing levels of incretin hormones in the blood, saxagliptin stimulates the pancreas to produce more insulin when blood glucose levels are high. It also indirectly reduces the amount of glucose made by the liver.

As a result of the action of both active substances, the blood glucose is reduced and this helps to control type 2 diabetes.

The applicant presented data from two main studies involving over 2,500 patients with type 2 diabetes that was not adequately controlled with metformin-based treatment.

In one study in patients whose blood sugar was not controlled by metformin alone, adding treatment with dapagliflozin or with saxagliptin plus dapagliflozin (the ingredients of Qtern) was compared with adding treatment with a sulfonylurea. In the other study, the effects of adding treatment with Qtern were compared with those of adding insulin in patients whose blood sugar was not adequately controlled with metformin with our without a sulfonylurea.

In both studies, the main measure of effectiveness was the change in the level of a substance in the blood called glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c), which gives an indication of how well the blood glucose is controlled.

The application was withdrawn while CHMP was still evaluating the initial documentation provided by the company.

As the CHMP was evaluating the initial documentation provided by the company, it had not yet made any recommendations.

In its letter notifying the Agency of the withdrawal of application, the company stated that it was withdrawing the application because of objections expressed during the initial evaluation.

The company informed the CHMP that there are no consequences for patients currently included in clinical trials using Qtern.

If you are in a clinical trial and need more information about your treatment, contact the doctor who is giving it to you.

There are no consequences for the use of Qtern in its authorised indication.

Questions and answers on the withdrawal of the application for a change to the marketing authorisation for Qtern (saxagliptin / dapagliflozin)

Reference Number: EMA/251728/2018

English (EN) (78.76 KB - PDF)

First published: 27/04/2018Last updated: 27/04/2018
View

Key facts

Name of medicine
Qtern
EMA product number
EMEA/H/C/004057
Active substance
  • Saxagliptin
  • dapagliflozin propanediol monohydrate
International non-proprietary name (INN) or common name
  • saxagliptin
  • dapagliflozin
Therapeutic area (MeSH)
  • Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
  • Diabetes Mellitus
  • Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases
  • Metabolic Diseases
  • Glucose Metabolism Disorders
Anatomical therapeutical chemical (ATC) code
A10BD21
Marketing authorisation holder
Astra Zeneca AB
Date of issue of marketing authorisation valid throughout the European Union
15/07/2016
Date of withdrawal
03/04/2018

Documents

Withdrawal letter: Qtern

English (EN) (125.52 KB - PDF)

First published: 27/04/2018Last updated: 27/04/2018
View

Related information on withdrawals

The question-and-answer (Q&A) document provides a summary of the CHMP's evaluation of the application at the time of the withdrawal, and includes a link to the company's formal withdrawal letter.

An assessment report is published when the application is withdrawn after the first stage of the CHMP's evaluation is completed ('day 90').

News on Qtern

Meeting highlights from the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) 23-26 April 2018
27/04/2018
Meeting highlights from the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) 23-26 May 2016
27/05/2016

More information on Qtern

  • Qtern
This page was last updated on 27/04/2018

Share this page

Back to top

Product emergency hotline

OUTSIDE WORKING HOURS

About us
What we do
Careers
Committees & working parties
Regulatory network
European experts
Languages
Frequently asked questions
Glossaries
About this website
Cookies
Website data protection notice
Data protection at EMA
Search tips
Access to documents
Contacts
Send a question
EMA Service Desk (system support)
Services and databases

European Medicines Agency
Domenico Scarlattilaan 6
1083 HS Amsterdam
The Netherlands

Tel: +31 (0)88 781 6000

How to find us

Postal address and deliveries

Business hours and holidays

  • RSS Feed
  • Bluesky
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
© 1995 - 2025 European Medicines Agency
European Union agencies network
An agency of the European Union