No, in the sense that this statement is false in a ring without unique factorization. For example, the polynomial $x^2 y$ is irreducible in $k[x^2, xy, x^2 y]$, and $x^2 y^2 \in (x^2 y)$ but $xy \not \in (x^2 y)$.

Here is a counterexample where the ring is even integrally closed. The element $2 + \sqrt{-5}$ is irreducible in $\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}]$, and $9 \in (2 + \sqrt{-5})$ but $3 \not \in (2 + \sqrt{-5})$.

(The lesson here is that irreducibility is not a useful idea in non-UFDs.)