Trabectedin was first trialed in humans in 1996.
Soft tissue sarcoma In 2007, the European Commission gave authorization for the marketing of trabectedin, under the trade name Yondelis, "for the treatment of patients with advanced soft tissue sarcoma, after failure of
anthracyclines and
ifosfamide, or who are unsuited to receive these agents". As part of the approval PharmaMar agreed to conduct a further trial to identify whether any specific chromosomal
translocations could be used to predict responsiveness to trabectedin. Trabectedin is also approved in South Korea and Russia. In 2015, (after a phase III study comparing trabectedin with
dacarbazine), the
US FDA approved trabectedin (Yondelis) for the treatment of liposarcoma and leiomyosarcoma that is either unresectable or has metastasized. Patients must have received prior chemotherapy with an anthracycline.
Ovarian cancer and other In 2008, the submission was announced of a registration dossier to the
European Medicines Agency and the FDA for Yondelis when administered in combination with
pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil, Caelyx) for the treatment of women with relapsed
ovarian cancer. In 2011, Johnson & Johnson voluntarily withdrew the submission in the United States following a request by the FDA for an additional phase III study to be done in support of the submission. Trabectedin is also in phase II trials for prostate, breast, and paediatric cancers. == Structure ==