The 
U.S. Food and Drug Administration today granted accelerated approval to 
Lynparza (olaparib), a new drug treatment for women with advanced 
ovarian cancer associated with defective BRCA genes, as detected by an 
FDA-approved test.Ovarian cancer forms in the ovary, one of a 
pair of female reproductive glands where ova, or eggs, are formed. The 
National Cancer Institute estimates that 21,980 American women will be 
diagnosed with and 14,270 will die from ovarian cancer in 2014.
Ovarian cancer risk factors 
Ovarian cancer symptoms
Lynparza
 is a poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitor that blocks enzymes 
involved in repairing damaged DNA. It is intended for women with heavily
 pretreated ovarian cancer that is associated with defective BRCA genes.
“Today’s
 approval constitutes the first of a new class of drugs for treating 
ovarian cancer,” said Richard Pazdur, MD, director of the Office of 
Hematology and Oncology Products in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation
 and Research. “Lynparza is approved for patients with specific 
abnormalities in the BRCA gene and is an example of how a greater 
understanding of the underlying mechanisms of disease can lead to 
targeted, more personalized treatment.
The FDA approved Lynparza 
with a genetic test called BRACAnalysis CDx, a companion diagnostic that
 will detect the presence of mutations in the BRCA genes (gBRCAm) in 
blood samples from patients with ovarian cancer. The BRCA genes are 
involved with repairing damaged DNA and normally work to suppress tumor 
growth. Women with mutations resulting in defective BRCA genes are more 
likely to get ovarian cancer, and it is estimated that 10 to 15 percent 
of all ovarian cancer is associated with these hereditary BRCA 
mutations.
The FDA evaluated the BRACAnalysis CDx’s safety and 
efficacy under the agency’s premarket approval pathway used for 
high-risk medical devices. Until now, the manufacturer, a clinical 
laboratory, had been marketing this test, although not specifically for 
use as a companion diagnostic, without FDA approval as a laboratory 
developed test (LDT), which is a test that is designed, manufactured and
 used in a single laboratory. The new test is approved as a companion 
diagnostic, specifically to identify patients with advanced ovarian 
cancer who may be candidates for treatment with Lynparza.
“The 
approval of safe and effective companion diagnostic tests and drugs 
continue to be important developments in oncology,” said Alberto 
Gutierrez, Ph.D., director of the Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and 
Radiological Health in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological 
Health. “We are very excited that the BRACAnalysis CDx is the FDA’s 
first approval of an LDT under a premarket approval application and is 
the first approval of an LDT companion diagnostic. The use of companion 
diagnostics helps bring to market safe and effective treatments specific
 to a patient’s needs.”
The FDA’s approval of the BRACAnalysis CDx
 is based on data from the clinical study used to support approval of 
Lynparza. Blood samples from clinical trial participants were tested to 
validate the test’s use for detecting BRCAmutations in this population.
Lynparza’s
 efficacy was examined in a study where 137 participants with 
gBRCAm-associated ovarian cancer received the drug. The study was 
designed to measure objective response rate (ORR), or the percentage of 
participants who experienced partial shrinkage or complete disappearance
 of the tumor. Results showed 34 percent of participants experienced ORR
 for an average of 7.9 months.
Common side effects of Lynparza 
included nausea, fatigue, vomiting, diarrhea, distorted taste 
(dysgeusia), indigestion (dyspepsia), headache, decreased appetite, 
common cold-like symptoms (nasopharyngitis), cough, joint paint 
(arthralgia), musculoskeletal pain, muscle pain (myalgia), back pain, 
rash (dermatitis) and abdominal pain. Serious side effects included the 
development of myelodysplastic syndrome, a condition where the bone 
marrow is unable to produce enough functioning blood cells; acute 
myeloid leukemia, a bone marrow cancer; and lung inflammation.
The
 most common laboratory abnormalities were increased creatinine, 
increased average volume of red blood cells (mean corpuscular volume 
elevation), decreased red blood cell count (hemoglobin), decreased white
 blood cell count (lymphocytes and neutrophils) and decreased platelet 
levels.
In June, Lynparza was reviewed by the FDA’s Oncologic 
Drugs Advisory Committee for potential use as maintenance therapy 
(treatment given to keep cancer from returning). The committee advised 
the agency in a vote of 11 to 2 that the data did not support Lynparza’s
 accelerated approval for this use. After the meeting, the company 
submitted additional information supporting Lynparza’s use for a 
different use: in patients with gBRCAm-associated ovarian cancer who 
have received three or more chemotherapy treatments.
The FDA is 
approving Lynparza under the agency’s accelerated approval program, 
which allows approval of a drug to treat a serious or life-threatening 
disease based on clinical data showing the drug has an effect on a 
surrogate endpoint reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit to 
patients. This program provides earlier patient access to promising new 
drugs while the company conducts confirmatory clinical trials. 
Lynparza’s application was reviewed under the FDA’s priority review 
program, which provides for an expedited review of drugs that are 
intended to treat a serious disease or condition and, if approved, would
 offer significant improvement compared to marketed products.
BRACAnalysis
 CDx’s application was reviewed under the FDA’s priority review program 
for devices, which provides for priority review of devices that meet 
certain criteria, including that the devices are intended to treat or 
diagnose a life-threatening or irreversibly debilitating disease or 
condition and, if approved, would offer significant, clinically 
meaningful advantages compared to marketed products.
Lynparza is 
marketed by AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, based in Wilmington, Delaware. 
BRACAnalysis CDx is manufactured by and performed at Salt Lake City, 
Utah-based Myriad Genetic Laboratories, Inc.