January 16, 2014 | By Carly Helfand .
Panel members voted nearly unanimously to reject the drug, tallying 10-0 against with one abstention. As Reuters reports, the committee said data from a sole clinical trial, the ATLAS program, were not enough to get the drug approved--especially in light of the fact that some of the trial data were missing. That doesn't look good for Xarelto's FDA prospects, and the agency has already turned the drug away twice for ACS.
Paul Burton, VP of clinical development for J&J's Janssen R&D segment, said in a statement that the company would work with the FDA to address questions raised at the meeting. "We appreciate the thoroughness of the committee's review and continue to believe rivaroxaban, in addition to the current standard of care, may help provide patients with ACS additional protection against life-threatening cardiovascular events such as death, heart attack and stroke," he said.
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