Policy & Regulation
European Commission Approves Bristol-Myers Squibb's Sprycel in Combination with Chemotherapy for Treatment of Pediatric Patients with Newly Diagnosed Philadelphia Chromosome-Positive Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
11 February 2019 - - The European Commission has approved Sprycel (dasatinib) in combination with chemotherapy for the treatment of pediatric patients with newly diagnosed Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia. This is the second pediatric leukemia indication for Sprycel in Europe, US-based Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (NYSE: BMY) said.

The approval includes both the tablet form of Sprycel and, in a first for pediatric patients with ALL in Europe, the powder for oral suspension formulation of Sprycel.

The approval is based on data from CA180-372 (NCT01460160), a Phase 2 trial which evaluated the addition of Sprycel to a chemotherapy regimen modeled on a Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster high-risk backbone in pediatric patients with newly diagnosed Ph+ ALL.

Results from the CA180-372 trial presented at the 2017 American Society of Hematology annual meeting showed that at three years, the combination of Sprycel and chemotherapy demonstrated an event-free survival rate, the study's primary endpoint, of 65.5% (95% CI: 57.7 to 73.7), and an overall survival rate of 91.5% (95% CI: 84.2 to 95.5).

The safety profile of Sprycel administered in combination with chemotherapy in pediatric patients with Ph+ ALL in the CA180-372 trial was consistent with the known safety profile of Sprycel in adults with Ph+ ALL and the known safety profile of the chemotherapy regimen.

Primary toxicities of any causality included hematological toxicity such as grade 3 or 4 febrile neutropenia (75.5%), sepsis (23.6%) and bacteremia (24.5%).

Non-hematologic, non-infectious grade 3 or 4 adverse events attributed to Sprycel and reported in more than 10% of patients were limited to elevated alanine aminotransferase (21.7%) and aspartate transaminase (10.4%).

Other grade 3 or 4 AEs attributed to Sprycel were pleural effusion, edema, hemorrhage and cardiac failure. No events of pulmonary hypertension or pulmonary arterial hypertension were reported.

Patients treated in the study (n=106), all aged younger than 18 years, received Sprycel at a daily dose of 60 mg/m2 on a continuous dosing regimen for up to 24 months, in combination with chemotherapy.

Seventy-seven percent of patients received Sprycel tablets exclusively, and 23% of patients received Sprycel PFOS at least once.

The recommended starting dosage for Sprycel in pediatric patients with Ph+ ALL is based on body weight. The Sprycel PFOS is for patients weighing 10 kg or less, or who cannot swallow tablets whole. The recommended dose for both the tablet and PFOS formulations should be recalculated every three months based on changes in body weight, or more often if necessary. 

Sprycel tablets should be swallowed whole and should not be crushed, cut or chewed. The exposure in patients receiving a crushed tablet is lower than in those swallowing an intact tablet. The Sprycel tablet and PFOS formulations are not bioequivalent.

Patients should only switch between the tablet and PFOS formulations at the discretion of a medical professional, who will decide the right formulation and dose based on the patient's weight.

Sprycel is a second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor designed to help inhibit BCR-ABL, an abnormal protein found on the mutated Philadelphia chromosome in most patients with chronic myeloid leukemia and some patients with ALL, which can trigger the overproduction of damaged or immature white blood cells.

By targeting the BCR-ABL protein, Sprycel can reduce the number of damaged white blood cells in the body, allowing for the production of more normal cells.

Sprycel is currently approved in more than 60 countries for the treatment of adults with Ph+ ALL or Ph+ CML in chronic phase (CP-CML) who are resistant or intolerant to prior therapy, and in more than 50 countries for the treatment of adults with newly diagnosed Ph+ CP-CML.

In 2017, Sprycel received its first pediatric indication when it became the first second-generation TKI approved for the treatment of patients one year of age and older with Ph+ CP-CML. Sprycel is also approved in combination with chemotherapy for the treatment of pediatric patients with newly diagnosed Ph+ ALL.

In Europe, both pediatric indications for Sprycel include the PFOS formulation, the approvals of which made Sprycel the first TKI with an approved powder formulation for administration in pediatric patients with Ph+ CP-CML and Ph+ ALL.

The PFOS formulation is also approved for adult patients with Ph+ CP-CML who cannot swallow tablets.
Login
Username:

Password: