PRADAXA (dabigatran etexilate mesylate)
PRADAXA is indicated for the treatment of Venous Thromboembolism.
How PRADAXA Works
Dabigatran and its acyl glucuronides are competitive, direct thrombin inhibitors. By inhibiting thrombin (a serine protease), the medication prevents the conversion of fibrinogen into fibrin, thereby thwarting thrombus development. The drug inhibits both free and clot-bound thrombin, as well as thrombin-induced platelet aggregation, effectively disrupting the coagulation cascade.
Development Insights
Details
- Status
- Prescription
- First Approved
- 2010-10-19
- Patent Cliff
- 2031
- Routes
- ORAL
- Dosage Forms
- CAPSULE, PELLETS
PRADAXA Approval History
What PRADAXA Treats
1 indicationsPRADAXA is approved for 1 conditions since its original approval in 2010. These indications span multiple therapeutic areas including oncology, immunology, and more.
- Venous Thromboembolism
PRADAXA Boxed Warning
(A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS, and (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA WARNING: (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS, and (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA See full prescribing information for complete boxed warning (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS: Premature discontinuation of any oral anticoagulant, including PRADAXA, increases the risk of thrombotic events. To red...
WARNING: (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS, and (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA WARNING: (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS, and (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA See full prescribing information for complete boxed warning (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS: Premature discontinuation of any oral anticoagulant, including PRADAXA, increases the risk of thrombotic events. To reduce this risk, consider coverage with another anticoagulant if PRADAXA is discontinued for a reason other than pathological bleeding or completion of a course of therapy ( 2.5 , 2.6 , 2.7 , 5.1 ). (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA: Epidural or spinal hematomas may occur in patients treated with PRADAXA who are receiving neuraxial anesthesia or undergoing spinal puncture. These hematomas may result in long-term or permanent paralysis ( 5.3 ). Monitor patients frequently for signs and symptoms of neurological impairment and if observed, treat urgently. Consider the benefits and risks before neuraxial intervention in patients who are or who need to be anticoagulated ( 5.3 ). (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS Premature discontinuation of any oral anticoagulant, including PRADAXA, increases the risk of thrombotic events. If anticoagulation with PRADAXA is discontinued for a reason other than pathological bleeding or completion of a course of therapy, consider coverage with another anticoagulant [see Dosage and Administration (2.5 , 2.6 , 2.7) and Warnings and Precautions (5.1) ]. (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA Epidural or spinal hematomas may occur in patients treated with PRADAXA who are receiving neuraxial anesthesia or undergoing spinal puncture. These hematomas may result in long-term or permanent paralysis. Consider these risks when scheduling patients for spinal procedures. Factors that can increase the risk of developing epid
PRADAXA Target & Pathway
ProTarget
The central enzyme in blood coagulation that converts fibrinogen to fibrin, forming blood clots. Direct thrombin inhibitors prevent clot formation and are used to prevent stroke and treat blood clots.
PRADAXA Competitive Set
ProThree rings of competition based on shared molecular targets and treated indications.
Direct competitors
Same target(s) AND same indication — head-to-head.
Indication competitors
Same indication, different mechanism — what else might this patient receive?
Filters applied: drops same-active-ingredient (505(b)(2) reformulations), route-mismatch (topical vs systemic), and cross-therapeutic-area matches in same-indication rings.
What's emerging in PRADAXA's indications
See all emerging drugs →Phase 3 candidates targeting molecules with no FDA-approved drug, in indications PRADAXA treats. First-in-class if their pivotal trials read out positive.
Drugs Similar to PRADAXA
FDA-approved drugs for similar conditions. Compare mechanisms and indications to understand treatment alternatives.
Clinical Trial Registry
3 trials| Trial | Sponsor ID | Phase | Status | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02945020 | CR108164 64294178HPC1003 | Ph 1 | completed | A Pharmacokinetic Interaction Study Between Odalasvir, Given as a Single Agent or in Combination With Simeprevir, and Dabigatran Etexilate Mesylate in Healthy Participants |
| NCT03807856 | 18-004345 | Ph 1 | terminated | Treating Acute Pancreatitis With Dabigatran, a Pilot Study |
| NCT01976507 results posted | 121204 | Ph 4 | completed | Use of Dabigatran Etexilate to Prevent Stroke and Thromboembolism |
Active Pipeline
Ongoing clinical trials by development phase
Key Completed Trials
Completed studies with published results, ranked by significance
Trial Timeline
Full development history with FDA approval milestones
Understanding FDA Approval Types
| Count | Type | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| - | ORIG | Original approval - drug first enters market |
| - | SUPPL - Efficacy | New indication (new disease/condition approved) |
| - | SUPPL - Labeling | Label text changes (warnings, dosing updates) |
| - | SUPPL - Manufacturing | Production changes (new facility) |
| - | SUPPL - Chemistry | Formulation changes (new dosage strength) |
Green lines in the timeline show ORIG and Efficacy approvals - the clinically meaningful milestones.
PRADAXA FDA Label Details
Indications & Usage
FDA Label (PDF)PRADAXA is indicated for the treatment of Venous Thromboembolism.
WARNING: (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS, and (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA WARNING: (A) PREMATURE DISCONTINUATION OF PRADAXA INCREASES THE RISK OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS, and (B) SPINAL/EPIDURAL HEMATOMA See full prescribing information for complete boxed ...
PRADAXA Patents & Exclusivity
Patents (4 active)
Pro Intelligence Preview
Deep insights for PRADAXA
Revenue Insights
- • Quarterly revenue tracking
- • Historical trend analysis
Patent Timeline
- • Cliff: 2031
- • 108 active patents
Trial Analysis
- • 3 total trials
- • Stage: Declining
Competitive Landscape
- • 2 similar drugs
- • Same target/indication analysis
Full approval history • All patents • Revenue trends • Competitor analysis
Data Sources
Data sourced from official FDA and NIH databases. Click links to verify on original sources.
How We Calculate These Metrics
Trial Activity Stage
Measures the current development activity pattern based on trial phases, status, and trends. Important: This measures R&D activity, not commercial lifecycle.
Trial statuses: "Active" means recruiting or ongoing. "Completed" means reached planned endpoint. "Terminated" means stopped early—often due to safety, efficacy, or business reasons.
- Growth: High proportion of early-phase trials (Phase 1/2), active development
- Expansion: Significant Phase 3 activity, approaching or pursuing approvals
- Mature: Substantial Phase 4 post-marketing studies
- Stable: Mixed phase distribution, steady development
- Declining: Low active trial ratio, reduced R&D investment