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  1. Home
  2. Medicines
  3. Tyverb - withdrawal of application for variation to marketing authorisation

Tyverb - withdrawal of application for variation to marketing authorisation

Application withdrawn

The application for a change to this medicine's authorisation has been withdrawn.

lapatinib
Post-authorisationHuman

Page contents

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

Overview

On 15 February 2012, Glaxo Group Ltd. officially notified the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) that it wishes to withdraw its application for a change to the marketing authorisation for Tyverb, to add the use in combination with paclitaxel for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer.

Tyverb is a medicine that contains the active substance lapatinib. It is available as tablets.

Tyverb is used in combination with capecitabine or with an aromatase inhibitor (other anticancer medicines) to treat patients with breast cancer that has been shown to be 'expressing' large amounts of HER2. This means that the cancer produces a specific protein called HER2 (also known as ErbB2) in large quantities on the surface of the tumour cells. Tyverb is used when the cancer is advanced or metastatic. 'Advanced' means that the cancer has started to spread and 'metastatic' means that the cancer has already spread to other parts of the body.

Tyverb has been authorised in the European Union (EU) since June 2008. It has been granted 'conditional' marketing authorisation because there is more evidence to come about the medicine. Tyverb is available in all EU Member States.

Tyverb was also expected to be used in combination with paclitaxel (another anticancer medicine) for the treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer whose tumours overexpress HER2.

Tyverb in combination with paclitaxel is expected to work in the same way as it does in its existing indication. The active substance in Tyverb, lapatinib, belongs to a group of medicines called protein kinase inhibitors. These compounds work by blocking enzymes known as protein kinases, which can be found in some receptors on the surface of cancer cells including HER2. HER2 is a receptor for epidermal growth factor and is involved in stimulating the cells to divide uncontrollably. By blocking these receptors, Tyverb helps to control cell division. About a quarter of breast cancers express HER2.

The company presented data from one main study involving a total of 444 patients with metastatic breast cancer that was expressing large quantities of HER2. The study compared Tyverb with placebo (a dummy treatment), both of which were taken together with paclitaxel. The main measure of effectiveness was overall survival (the length of time the patients lived).

The application was withdrawn after 'day 90'. This means that the CHMP had evaluated the documentation provided by the company and formulated lists of questions. The CHMP was assessing the company's responses to the questions at the time of the withdrawal. After the CHMP had assessed the company's responses to the questions, there were still some unresolved issues.

Based on the review of the data and the company's response to the CHMP lists of questions, at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP had concerns and was of the provisional opinion that Tyverb could not have been approved for use in combination with paclitaxel in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer.

The CHMP was concerned that the main study, which compared Tyverb with placebo, did not allow the Committee to conclude on how Tyverb compares with other authorised treatments. In particular, the Committee could not exclude the possibility that Tyverb in combination with paclitaxel is inferior to the standard treatment, trastuzumab plus paclitaxel. A comparative study would have addressed this issue.

Therefore, at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP was of the opinion that the company had not addressed its concerns and that the benefit-risk balance of Tyverb in combination with paclitaxel for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer could not be properly assessed.

In its letter notifying the Agency of the withdrawal of application, the company stated that its decision to withdraw the application was based on the CHMP's assessment that the lack of a study comparing Tyverb with another treatment hampered the proper assessment of the benefit-risk balance in European patients in the applied indication.

The company informed the CHMP that there are no consequences for patients currently included in clinical trials using Tyverb at this time.

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 on the use of Tyverb in its authorised indications.

Questions and answers on the withdrawal of the application for a change to the marketing authorisation for Tyverb (lapatinib)

Reference Number: EMA/169461/2012

English (EN) (80.25 KB - PDF)

First published: 16/03/2012Last updated: 16/03/2012
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Other languages (21)

български (BG) (99.87 KB - PDF)

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español (ES) (75 KB - PDF)

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čeština (CS) (88.95 KB - PDF)

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dansk (DA) (61.37 KB - PDF)

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Deutsch (DE) (61.77 KB - PDF)

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eesti keel (ET) (60.27 KB - PDF)

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ελληνικά (EL) (102.47 KB - PDF)

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français (FR) (61.28 KB - PDF)

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italiano (IT) (122.58 KB - PDF)

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latviešu valoda (LV) (89.55 KB - PDF)

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lietuvių kalba (LT) (87.63 KB - PDF)

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magyar (HU) (83.27 KB - PDF)

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Malti (MT) (148.08 KB - PDF)

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Nederlands (NL) (60.84 KB - PDF)

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polski (PL) (88.06 KB - PDF)

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português (PT) (135.94 KB - PDF)

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română (RO) (86.62 KB - PDF)

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slovenčina (SK) (146.65 KB - PDF)

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slovenščina (SL) (83.6 KB - PDF)

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Suomi (FI) (60.03 KB - PDF)

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svenska (SV) (59.84 KB - PDF)

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Key facts

Name of medicine
Tyverb
EMA product number
EMEA/H/C/000795
Active substance
lapatinib
International non-proprietary name (INN) or common name
lapatinib
Therapeutic area (MeSH)
Breast Neoplasms
Anatomical therapeutical chemical (ATC) code
L01EH01
Marketing authorisation holder
Novartis Europharm Limited
Date of issue of marketing authorisation valid throughout the European Union
10/06/2008
Date of withdrawal
15/02/2012

Documents

Withdrawal assessment report for Tyverb

AdoptedReference Number: EMA/CHMP/145195/2012

English (EN) (2.03 MB - PDF)

First published: 16/03/2012Last updated: 16/03/2012
View

Tyverb: Withdrawal letter

English (EN) (112.1 KB - PDF)

First published: 16/03/2012Last updated: 16/03/2012
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 Tyverb

No change to product information for breast cancer medicine Tyverb following re-assessment of data
27/03/2020
Meeting highlights from the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) 23-26 March 2020 (updated)
27/03/2020
Re-analysis of data on use of breast cancer medicine Tyverb following treatment with trastuzumab
30/04/2019
Meeting highlights from the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) 24-27 June 2013
28/06/2013
GlaxoSmithKline withdraws its application for an extension of the indication for Tyverb (lapatinib)
16/02/2012

More information on Tyverb

  • Tyverb
This page was last updated on 16/03/2012

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