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Sprycel vs Cabometyx

Dasatinib  ·  Cabozantinib

Both are tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Here is how Sprycel and Cabometyx compare on class, mechanism, dosing, approval and supply.

At a glance

SprycelDasatinib
CabometyxCabozantinib
Brand names
Sprycel
Cabometyx / Cometriq
Drug class
Tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Route
Oral
Oral
Marketed by
Bristol Myers Squibb
Exelixis
First FDA approval
28 Jun 2006
25 Apr 2016
US shortage
Not listed
Not listed

Key differences

What each one treats

SprycelDasatinib

SPRYCEL (dasatinib) is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with • newly diagnosed Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in chronic phase. • chronic, accelerated, or myeloid or lymphoid blast phase Ph+ CML with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib. • Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL) with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy. SPRYCEL (dasatinib) is indicated for the treatment of pediatric patients 1 year of age and older with • Ph+ CML in chronic phase. • newly diagnosed Ph+ ALL in combination with chemotherapy. SPRYCEL is a kinase inhibitor indicated for the treatment of • newly diagnosed adults with Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in chronic phase. (1 , 14) • adults with chronic, accelerated, or myeloid or lymphoid blast phase Ph+ CML with…

CabometyxCabozantinib

CABOMETYX is a kinase inhibitor indicated for the treatment of patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC). ( 1.1 ) patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma, as a first-line treatment in combination with nivolumab ( 1.1 ) patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) who have been previously treated with sorafenib ( 1.2 ) adult and pediatric patients 12 years of age and older with locally advanced or metastatic differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) that has progressed following prior VEGFR-targeted therapy and who are radioactive iodine-refractory or ineligible ( 1.3 ) adult and pediatric patients 12 years of age and older with previously treated, unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic, well-differentiated pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNET). ( 1.4 ) adult and pediatric patients 12 years of age and older with previously treated, unresectable, locally advanced or metastat…

How each one works

SprycelTyrosine kinase inhibitor

12.1 Mechanism of Action Dasatinib, at nanomolar concentrations, inhibits the following kinases: BCR-ABL, SRC family (SRC, LCK, YES, FYN), c-KIT, EPHA2, and PDGFRβ. Based on modeling studies, dasatinib is predicted to bind to multiple conformations of the ABL kinase. In vitro , dasatinib was active in leukemic cell lines representing variants of imatinib mesylate-sensitive and resistant disease. Dasatinib inhibited the growth of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cell lines overexpressing BCR-ABL. Under the conditions of the assays, dasatinib could overcome imatinib resistance resulting from BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations, activation of alternate signalin…

CabometyxTyrosine kinase inhibitor

12.1 Mechanism of Action In vitro biochemical and/or cellular assays have shown that cabozantinib inhibits the tyrosine kinase activity of MET, VEGFR-1, -2 and -3, AXL, RET, ROS1, TYRO3, MER, KIT, TRKB, FLT-3, and TIE-2. These receptor tyrosine kinases are involved in both normal cellular function and pathologic processes such as oncogenesis, metastasis, tumor angiogenesis, drug resistance, and maintenance of the tumor microenvironment.

Related comparisons

Gleevec VS Sprycel Gleevec VS Cabometyx Tasigna VS Sprycel Tasigna VS Cabometyx

Read more

Sprycel profile Cabometyx profile Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors All comparisons
This is not medical advice, and not a recommendation of one drug over the other.

Which medicine is right for a given person depends on their diagnosis, other conditions, other medicines, kidney and liver function, pregnancy, and cost or reimbursement — none of which this page knows. Two drugs in the same class are not automatically interchangeable. Never start, stop or switch a prescription medicine on the basis of a web page; that decision belongs to you and your clinician or pharmacist.

Class and summary text is written by the Priya Life Science editorial team. Label, mechanism, route, manufacturer and approval data come from the U.S. FDA via the openFDA API; shortage status from the FDA Drug Shortage Database. Approvals, indications and brand names differ between the US, EU/Ireland (EMA/HPRA) and other regions — a drug approved in one may not be approved, or may carry a different name, in another.