FDA Approves Orfadin (Nitisinone) For Hereditary Tyrosinemia Type 1
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FDA Approves Orfadin (Nitisinone) For Hereditary Tyrosinemia Type 1

BETHESDA, MD -- January 23, 2002 -- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a new drug yesterday, nitisinone capsules, to treat hereditary tyrosinemia type 1 (HT-1), a rare pediatric disease causing progressive liver failure and liver cancer in young children.
Fewer than 100 children in the United States are affected by HT-1.

Nitisinone, which will be marketed under the name Orfadin, is an orphan drug. Orphan products are developed to treat rare diseases, or conditions that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the U.S. The Orphan Drug Act provides a seven-year period of exclusive marketing to the first sponsor who obtains marketing approval for a designated orphan drug.

Because of liver failure or liver cancer, children with hereditary tyrosinemia type I rarely survive into their twenties without a liver transplant. However, for children treated early enough with nitisinone, liver failure and liver cancer occur at much-reduced rates.

Nitisinone was studied in more than 180 patients with a median age of nine months when therapy started. When the drug was combined with a restricted diet, the four-year survival rate of children under two months of age at the time of diagnosis was 88 percent. Historical data for children treated with dietary restrictions alone shows a survival rate of 29 percent for the same time period.

Nitisinone must be used in conjunction with a diet restricted in the amino acids tyrosine and phenylalanine. High tyrosine levels may be toxic to eyes, skin and the nervous system.

The most common side effects of the drug were related to high tyrosine levels due to patients not eating the appropriate foods as well as rare cases of mild reductions in platelet and white blood cell counts.

Nitisinone should be prescribed by physicians experienced in treating hereditary tyrosinemia type I, as the correct dose must be adjusted for each patient according to specific biochemical tests. Access to a nutritionist skilled in managing children with inborn errors of metabolism requiring a low protein diet is an important part of therapy. Blood tests should be monitored regularly to maintain the correct dose for that patient and to monitor for potential adverse events.

Nitisinone is distributed by Orphan Pharmaceuticals Inc., of Nashville, Tennessee.

SOURCE: Food and Drug Administration

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