- Alcohol Intake Increases Cancer Risk, Beverages Should Carry Warning: Surgeon General
- These Are Some of the Best Diets for 2025, Report Says
- AI Proves Useful for Ovarian Cancer Diagnosis
- Ready-to-Eat Broccoli Pulled from Walmart Shelves Due to Listeria Risk
- Some Brain Cells Change with Age, Some Don’t: Study
- More Activity, Less Risk: Tell Your MD How Much You Move
- Peer Pressure Influences Older Adult Alcohol Consumption
- Feeling Self-Conscious Is Linked to Teen Binge Drinking
- Why Does Cancer Spread to the Lungs So Often?
- Experts Warn of Growing Risks as Bird Flu Cases Rise
FDA Approves ‘Biosimilar’ Drug Ogivri for Breast, Stomach Cancers
Ogivri (trastuzumab-dkst) has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as the nation’s first biosimilar drug to treat certain breast and stomach cancers, the agency said Friday in a news release.
The maker of a biosimilar, derived from a living organism, must demonstrate that the new product is “highly similar” to an already approved medication, and that it has no clinically significant difference in terms of its potency, safety and purity, the FDA said.
Ogivri is approved to treat breast or stomach cancers attributed to a problematic HER2+ gene. The FDA said its maker, Mylan, provided sufficient evidence that the drug is biosimilar to the Genentech drug Herceptin, which was approved by the agency in 1998.
“The FDA continues to grow the number of biosimilar approvals, helping to promote competition that can lower health care costs,” said FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb. “This is especially important when it comes to a disease like cancer, that has a high cost burden for patients.”
Expected side effects for Ogivri include headache, diarrhea, nausea, chills, fever, infection, congestive heart failure, insomnia, cough and rash, the FDA said.
Like Herceptin, Ogivri’s label will include a boxed warning about an increased risk of heart disease, serious allergic-like reactions, lung damage and harm to a developing fetus, the agency said.
Mylan is based in Canonsburg, Penn.
More information
The FDA has more about this approval.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.