Hikma announces launch of Generic Xeloda® Tablets 150 mg and 500 mg in the US

London, 20 July 2016 – Hikma Pharmaceuticals PLC (Hikma) (LSE: HIK) (NASDAQ Dubai: HIK) (OTC: HKMPY) (rated Ba1 Moody’s / BB+ S&P, both stable), the fast growing multinational pharmaceutical group, today announces that its wholly owned U.S. affiliate, West‐Ward Pharmaceuticals Corp. (West‐Ward), has launched Capecitabine Tablets 150 mg and 500 mg, the generic equivalents to Xeloda®[1] Tablets.  West‐ Ward’s Capecitabine Tablets are indicated for adjuvant treatment in patients with Dukes’ C colon cancer, as monotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer, and in combination with docetaxel or as monotherapy in patients with metastatic breast cancer.

Press Release Product 20 July 2016

According to IMS Health, US sales of Capecitabine Tablets 150 mg and 500 mg were approximately $493 million for the 12 months ending May 2016. Said Darwazah, Chairman and CEO of Hikma said, “We are very pleased to have this product approval from the Columbus portfolio.  We have an excellent pipeline of differentiated products and proven R&D, supply chain and operational capabilities that we expect will drive accelerated and sustainable future growth."

Important safety information

Patients receiving concomitant capecitabine and oral coumarin‐derivative anticoagulant therapy should have their anticoagulant response (INR or prothrombin time) monitored frequently in order to adjust the anticoagulant dose accordingly. A clinically important capecitabine‐warfarin drug interaction was demonstrated in a clinical pharmacology trial.  Altered coagulation parameters and/or bleeding, including death, have been reported in patients taking capecitabine concomitantly with coumarin‐derivative anticoagulants such as warfarin and phenprocoumon. Post‐marketing reports have shown clinically significant increasesin prothrombin time and INR in patients who were stabilised on anticoagulants at the time capecitabine was introduced. These events occurred within several days and up to several months after initiating capecitabine therapy and, in a few cases, within 1 month after stopping capecitabine.   These events occurred in patients with and without liver metastases. Age greater than 60 and a diagnosis of cancer independently predispose patients to an increased risk of coagulopathy.

Capecitabine is contraindicated in patients with severe renal impairment, with known dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase deficiency, or with a known hypersensitivity to capecitabine or any of its components, or 5‐fluorouracil. Patients receiving therapy with capecitabine should be monitored by a physician experienced in the use of cancer chemotherapeutic agents. For additional information, please refer to the Package Insert for full prescribing information, available on https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov.

[1] Xeloda® is a registered trademark of Hoffmann‐LaRoche Inc.

Important notice for users

You are about to access Hikma historic archive material. Any reference in these archives to Hikma products or their uses may not reflect current medical knowledge and should not be used as a source of information on the present product label, efficacy data, or safety data. Please refer to your approved national product label (SmPC) for current product information.

I have read this warning and will not be using any of the contained product information for clinical purposes.