MedPath
EMA Approval

Alimta

L01BA04

pemetrexed

Antineoplastic agents

Basic Information

EMA regulatory identification and product classification information

EMA Identifiers

ATC CodeL01BA04
EMA European Classification

Overview Summary

Comprehensive product overview and regulatory summary

This is a summary of the European public assessment report (EPAR) for Alimta. It explains how the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) assessed the medicine to reach its opinion in favour of granting a marketing authorisation and its recommendations on the conditions of use for Alimta.

Authorisations (1)

EMEA/H/C/000564

Eli Lilly Nederland B.V.,Papendorpseweg 83,3528 BJ Utrecht,Netherlands

Authorised

September 20, 2004

Active Substances (1)

pemetrexed

Documents (17)

CHMP post-authorisation summary of positive opinion for Alimta on 29 May 2009

May 28, 2009

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

CHMP post-authorisation summary of positive opinion for Alimta on 21 February 2008

February 20, 2008

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta-H-C-564-II-15 : EPAR - Scientific Discussion - Variation

September 7, 2009

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta : EPAR - Procedural steps taken before authorisation

February 8, 2006

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta : EPAR - Product Information

October 9, 2009

DRUG_PRODUCT_INFORMATION

Alimta-H-C-PSUSA-00002330-201502: EPAR - Scientific conclusions and grounds recommending the variation to the terms of the marketing authorisation

January 27, 2016

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta : EPAR - Procedural steps taken and scientific information after authorisation

October 9, 2009

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta-H-C-564-II-33 : EPAR - Assessment Report - Variation

December 8, 2011

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta-H-C-PSUSA-00002330-201802: EPAR - Scientific conclusions and grounds recommending the variation to the terms of the marketing authorisation

April 10, 2019

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta : EPAR - Summary for the public

October 8, 2009

OVERVIEW_DOCUMENT

Alimta : EPAR - All Authorised presentations

November 11, 2007

AUTHORISED_PRESENTATIONS

CHMP post-authorisation summary of positive opinion for Alimta

September 22, 2011

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta-H-C-564-II-09 : EPAR - Scientific Discussion - Variation

May 7, 2008

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta : EPAR - Scientific Discussion

February 8, 2006

INITIAL_MARKETING_AUTHORISATION_DOCUMENTS

Alimta : EPAR - Procedural steps taken before authorisation

February 8, 2006

INITIAL_MARKETING_AUTHORISATION_DOCUMENTS

Alimta : EPAR - Scientific Discussion

February 8, 2006

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Alimta-H-C-PSUSA-00002330-202402: EPAR - Scientific conclusions and grounds recommending the variation to the terms of the marketing authorisation

March 5, 2025

CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION

Overview Q&A (9)

Question

How is Alimta used?

Answer

Alimta should only be given under the supervision of a doctor who is qualified in the use of chemotherapy.

The recommended dose of Alimta is 500 mg per square metre of body surface area (calculated using the patient’s height and weight). It is given once every three weeks as an infusion lasting 10 minutes. To reduce side effects, patients should take a corticosteroid (a type of medicine that reduces inflammation) and folic acid (a type of vitamin), and receive injections of vitamin B12 during treatment with Alimta. When Alimta is given with cisplatin, an ‘anti-emetic’ medicine (to prevent vomiting) and fluids (to prevent dehydration) should also be given before or after the cisplatin dose.

Treatment should be delayed or stopped, or the dose reduced, in patients whose blood counts are abnormal or who have certain other side effects. For more information, see the summary of product characteristics (also part of the EPAR).

Question

How does Alimta work?

Answer

The active substance in Alimta, pemetrexed, is a cytotoxic medicine (a medicine that kills cells that are dividing, such as cancer cells), which belongs to the group ‘antimetabolites’. In the body, pemetrexed is converted into an active form that blocks the activity of the enzymes that are involved in producing ‘nucleotides’ (the building blocks of DNA and RNA, the genetic material of cells). As a result, the active form of pemetrexed slows down the formation of DNA and RNA and prevents the cells from dividing and multiplying. The conversion of pemetrexed into its active form occurs more readily in cancer cells than in normal cells, leading to higher levels of the active form of the medicine and a longer duration of action in cancer cells. This results in the division of cancer cells being reduced, while normal cells are only slightly affected.

Question

Other information about Alimta

Answer

The European Commission granted a marketing authorisation valid throughout the European Union for Alimta on 20 September 2004.

For more information about treatment with Alimta, read the package leaflet (also part of the EPAR) or contact your doctor or pharmacist.

Question

Why has Alimta been approved?

Answer

The CHMP concluded that Alimta’s benefits are greater than its risks and recommended that it be given marketing authorisation.

Question

What is Alimta?

Answer

Alimta is a powder that is made up into a solution for infusion (drip into a vein). It contains the active substance pemetrexed.

Question

What is Alimta used for?

Answer

Alimta is used to treat two types of lung cancer:

  • malignant pleural mesothelioma (a cancer of the lining of the lungs that is usually caused by exposure to asbestos), where it is used together with cisplatin in patients who have not received chemotherapy before and whose cancer cannot be removed by surgery;
  • advanced ‘non-small-cell’ lung cancer of the kind known as ‘non-squamous’, where it is used either in combination with cisplatin in previously untreated patients or on its own in patients who have previously received anticancer treatment. It can also be used as a maintenance treatment in patients who have received a platinum-based chemotherapy.

The medicine can only be obtained with a prescription.

Question

How has Alimta been studied?

Answer

For the treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma, Alimta in combination with cisplatin has been compared with cisplatin alone in one main study in 456 patients who had not received chemotherapy for their disease before.

For the treatment of locally advanced or metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer, Alimta was compared with gemcitabine (another anticancer medicine), in combination with cisplatin, in a study involving 1,725 patients who had not received chemotherapy before.

Alimta was also compared with docetaxel (another anticancer medicine) in one study involving 571 patients who had received chemotherapy in the past. For maintenance treatment, Alimta was compared with placebo (a dummy treatment) in two main studies involving 1,202 patients whose cancer had not got worse during platinum-based chemotherapy.

The main measures of effectiveness were how long the patients survived and how long they lived without their cancer getting worse.

Question

What benefit has Alimta shown during the studies?

Answer

Alimta increased the survival time of patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma. Patients receiving Alimta and cisplatin survived for an average of 12.1 months, compared with 9.3 months in those receiving cisplatin alone.

In the treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer, Alimta was as effective as the comparators, with survival times around 10.3 months in patients who had not received chemotherapy in the past, and around 8.1 months in those who had received chemotherapy in the past.

In one maintenance treatment study, patients receiving Alimta lived for a further 4.3 months from the start of maintenance treatment without their cancer getting worse, compared with 2.6 months in those receiving placebo. In the second maintenance study, the figures were 4.1 months in the Alimta and 2.8 months in the placebo group.

Improved survival times with Alimta were only seen in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer of the non-squamous type.

Question

What is the risk associated with Alimta?

Answer

The most common side effects with Alimta, used on its own or with other anticancer medicines, are bone marrow suppression (when the bone marrow produces less blood cells than normal) and gastrointestinal toxicities (side effects affecting the stomach and gut). Bone-marrow suppression causes decreased levels in the blood of white blood cells (the cells that fight infection), platelets (components that help the blood to clot) and haemoglobin (the protein found in red blood cells that carries oxygen around the body). The gastrointestinal toxicities seen with Alimta are loss of appetite, nausea (feeling sick), vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation, pharyngitis (sore throat), and mucositis or stomatitis (inflammation of the lining of the digestive system and mouth). For the full list of all side effects reported with Alimta, see the package leaflet.

Alimta must not be used in people who are hypersensitive (allergic) to pemetrexed or any of the other ingredients. It must not be used during breast-feeding or at the same time as the vaccine for yellow fever. Alimta affects fertility, so both men and women who receive it need to be made aware of this.

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