The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics
FROM
ISSUE
1430
In Brief: Ponatinib (Iclusig) Marketing and Sales Suspended
Download PDF:   US English
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2013 Nov 25;55(1430):93
Disclosures
Objective(s)
 Select a term to see related articles  drug safety   Iclusig   leukemia   ponatinib 

The FDA recently issued a Drug Safety Communication saying that it had asked the manufacturer of ponatinib (Iclusig – Ariad) to suspend marketing and sales of the drug because of the risk of life-threatening blood clots and severe narrowing of blood vessels.1 Ponatinib is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor that was granted accelerated approval by the FDA in December 2012 for treatment of chronic-, accelerated, or blast-phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) resistant to (or the patients were intolerant to) prior tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy. It is the first tyrosine kinase inhibitor that is effective against the T315I mutation, which is present in up to 20% of patients with treatment-resistant CML.2

The labeling of Iclusig includes a warning about the risk of arterial thrombosis, but recent clinical trial results showed an unexpectedly high incidence of serious adverse vascular events, some fatal, which occurred in 24% of patients in one clinical trial with a median duration of 1.3 years and 48% in another with a median duration of 2.7 years. These adverse events occurred in some patients as early as 2 weeks after starting ponatinib. Neither trial included a control group. Blindness has occurred in some patients and in one of the trials, 8% of those treated with the drug developed heart failure.

Suspension of marketing and sales does not necessarily mean that Iclusig will be withdrawn permanently; it is the only option available for some treatment-resistant patients.3 The drug could be returned to the market, possibly with new labeling narrowing the selection of patients, lowering the dosage, or recommending use of aspirin concomitantly to decrease the risk of thrombosis.4

© The Medical Letter, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The Medical Letter, Inc. does not warrant that all the material in this publication is accurate and complete in every respect. The Medical Letter, Inc. and its editors shall not be held responsible for any damage resulting from any error, inaccuracy, or omission.
This article has been freely provided.
arrow to previous article
arrow to next article