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Activase (ALTEPLASE)

Roche · FDA-approved approved Enzyme Under review Quality 50/100

Activase (generic name: ALTEPLASE) is a Enzyme drug developed by Roche. It is currently FDA-approved (first approved 1996) for Restoration of function to central venous access devices.

Activase, also known as Alteplase, is used to treat conditions such as catheter occlusion, thrombosis, ischemic stroke, and acute infarction, particularly in the middle cerebral artery. It is a thrombolytic agent that works by dissolving blood clots.

At a glance

Generic nameALTEPLASE
SponsorRoche
TargetPlasminogen
ModalityEnzyme
Therapeutic areaCardiovascular
PhaseFDA-approved
First approval1996

Approved indications

Common side effects

Drug interactions

Key clinical trials

Primary sources

Every claim on this page is sourced from regulatory or scientific primary sources. See our editorial policy for full methodology.

SourceUsed for
FDA labelMechanism, indications, dosing, boxed warnings, drug interactions
ClinicalTrials.govTrial enrolment, design, endpoints, results

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Frequently asked questions about Activase

What is Activase?

Activase (ALTEPLASE) is a Enzyme drug developed by Roche, indicated for Restoration of function to central venous access devices.

What is Activase used for?

Activase is indicated for Restoration of function to central venous access devices.

Who makes Activase?

Activase is developed and marketed by Roche (see full Roche pipeline at /company/roche).

What is the generic name of Activase?

ALTEPLASE is the generic (nonproprietary) name of Activase.

When was Activase approved?

Activase was first approved on 1996.

What development phase is Activase in?

Activase is FDA-approved (marketed).

What are the side effects of Activase?

Common side effects of Activase include Major hemorrhage, Sepsis, Venous thrombosis, Pulmonary or arterial emboli, Intracranial hemorrhage, Gastrointestinal bleeding.

What does Activase target?

Activase targets Plasminogen.

Related

Primary sources · FDA · ClinicalTrials.gov · EMA · SEC EDGAR · ChEMBL · Wikidata · full sourcing