Basic Information
EMA regulatory identification and product classification information
EMA Identifiers
Overview Summary
Comprehensive product overview and regulatory summary
This is a summary of the European Public Assessment Report (EPAR) for Tepadina. 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 Tepadina.
Active Substances (1)
thiotepa
Documents (9)
CHMP summary of positive opinion for Tepadina
December 16, 2009
INITIAL_MARKETING_AUTHORISATION_DOCUMENTS
Tepadina : EPAR - Product Information
May 5, 2010
DRUG_PRODUCT_INFORMATION
Tepadina : EPAR - Summary for the public
May 5, 2010
OVERVIEW_DOCUMENT
Tepadina : EPAR - Risk management plan
September 7, 2022
RISK_MANAGEMENT_PLAN_SUMMARY
Tepadina : EPAR - Procedural steps taken and scientific information after authorisation
September 28, 2011
CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION
Tepadina : EPAR - Public assessment report
May 5, 2010
INITIAL_MARKETING_AUTHORISATION_DOCUMENTS
Tepadina : EPAR - Public assessment report
May 5, 2010
CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION
CHMP summary of positive opinion for Tepadina
December 16, 2009
CHANGES_SINCE_INITIAL_AUTHORISATION
Tepadina : EPAR - All Authorised presentations
May 5, 2010
AUTHORISED_PRESENTATIONS
Overview Q&A (10)
Question
How is Tepadina used?
Answer
Tepadina treatment must be supervised by a doctor who has experience in treatments given before transplantation. It must be given as an infusion into a large vein lasting two to four hours.
The dose of Tepadina depends on the type of blood disease or solid tumour that the patient has and the type of transplantation to be carried out. The dose also depends on the patient’s body surface area (calculated using the height and weight of the patient) or on the patient’s weight. In adults, the daily dose ranges from 120 to 481 mg per square metre (m2) given for up to five days before transplantation. In children, the daily dose ranges from 125 to 350 mg/m2 given for up to three days before transplantation. For further information, see the summary of product characteristics (also part of the EPAR).
Question
How has Tepadina been studied?
Answer
Because thiotepa has been used for many years in the EU, the company presented data from the published literature. This included 109 studies involving around 6,000 adults and 900 children with blood diseases or solid tumours, who were having a transplant of blood-making cells. The studies looked at the number of patients with successful transplantations, how long it took for the diseases to come back and how long the patients survived.
Question
How does Tepadina work?
Answer
The active substance in Tepadina, thiotepa, belongs to a group of medicines called ‘alkylating agents’. These substances are ‘cytotoxic’. This means that they kill cells, especially cells that multiply rapidly, such as cancer or progenitor (or ‘stem’) cells (cells that can develop into different types of cell). Tepadina is used with other medicines before transplantation to destroy the abnormal cells and the patient’s existing blood-making cells. This allows new cells to be transplanted, by creating space for the new cells and reducing the risk of rejection.
Thiotepa has been used to prepare patients for transplantation of blood-making cells in the European Union (EU) since the late 1980s.
Question
What benefit has Tepadina shown during the studies?
Answer
The published studies showed that thiotepa used in combination with other chemotherapy medicines is beneficial to adults and children being treated for blood diseases and solid tumours. It helps to destroy the patient’s existing blood-making cells, resulting in the successful transplantation of new cells, improved survival and a reduced risk of the diseases coming back.
Question
What measures are being taken to ensure the safe and effective use of Tepadina?
Answer
A risk management plan has been developed to ensure that Tepadina is used as safely as possible. Based on this plan, safety information has been included in the summary of product characteristics and the package leaflet for Tepadina, including the appropriate precautions to be followed by healthcare professionals and patients.
Question
Other information about Tepadina:
Answer
The European Commission granted a marketing authorisation valid throughout the European Union for Tepadina on 15 March 2010.
For more information about treatment with Tepadina, read the package leaflet (also part of the EPAR) or contact your doctor or pharmacist.
Question
What is the risk associated with Tepadina?
Answer
The most common side effects seen with Tepadina when used with other medicines are infections, cytopenia (low number of cells in the blood), graft-versus-host disease (when the transplanted cells attack the body), disorders of the gut, haemorrhagic cystitis (bleeding and inflammation in the bladder) and mucosal inflammation (inflammation of the moist body surfaces). For the full list of all side effects reported with Tepadina in adults and children, see the package leaflet.
Tepadina must not be used in women who are pregnant or breast-feeding. It must also not be used together with the vaccine against yellow fever or vaccines containing live viruses or bacteria. For the full list of restrictions, see the package leaflet.
Question
What is Tepadina?
Answer
Tepadina is a powder that is made up into a solution for infusion (drip into a vein). It contains the active substance thiotepa.
Question
What is Tepadina used for?
Answer
Tepadina is used in combination with chemotherapy (medicines to treat cancer) in two ways:
- as a ‘conditioning’ (preparative) treatment before transplantation of haematopoietic progenitor cells (the cells that make blood cells). This type of transplant is used in patients who need to replace their blood-making cells because they have a blood disease such as a cancer of the blood (including leukaemia) or diseases causing low red blood cell counts (including thalassaemia or sickle-cell anaemia);
- during the treatment of solid tumours when high-dose chemotherapy followed by transplantation of haematopoietic progenitor cells is needed.
Tepadina can be used for transplantation of cells from a donor and for transplantation of cells derived from the patient’s own body.
Because the number of patients in the European Union (EU) that undergo this type of conditioning and transplant is low, Tepadina was designated an ‘orphan medicine’ (a medicine used in rare diseases) on 29 January 2007.
The medicine can only be obtained with a prescription.
Question
Why has Tepadina been approved?
Answer
The CHMP noted that the active substance in Tepadina, thiotepa, has a well established used. This means that it has been used for many years and that there was sufficient information on its effectiveness and safety. The Committee decided that, based on available published information, Tepadina’s benefits are greater than its risks and recommended that it be given marketing authorisation.