
The European Medicines Agency has accepted Bayer’s marketing authorization application for asundexian, marking a major advance in Factor XIa Inhibition Stroke prevention. This oral agent selectively interrupts a key step in the coagulation cascade to reduce recurrent ischemic stroke risk in adults with prior non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke or high-risk transient ischemic attack.
Escalating Stroke Crisis Across Europe
European healthcare systems face a steadily worsening stroke burden, with approximately ten million people living with its consequences and over one million new cases annually. Between 2010 and 2019, ischemic stroke prevalence rose by four percent and related mortality increased by seven percent across EU member states, generating enormous human suffering and global economic costs estimated at 891 billion US dollars each year.
Event-Driven Trial Powers Regulatory Review
The application rests on the OCEANIC-STROKE Phase 3 trial, a large international, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study that enrolled 12,327 participants. Patients received asundexian 50 mg once daily or matching placebo on top of standard antiplatelet therapy in an event-driven design that continued until a prespecified number of ischemic strokes occurred. Efficacy was measured by time to first ischemic stroke; safety focused on ISTH major bleeding.
Factor XIa Inhibition Stroke Shows Clear Therapeutic Advantage
Factor XIa Inhibition Stroke therapy with asundexian delivered a 26 percent relative reduction in ischemic stroke compared with placebo, without any increase in ISTH major bleeding. Full results published in The New England Journal of Medicine confirm that selectively targeting Factor XIa disrupts pathological thrombus formation while preserving normal hemostasis.
Value-Based Opportunities in Stroke Prevention
Priority reviews granted by both the FDA and China’s Center for Drug Evaluation signal strong global regulatory interest. The combination of meaningful stroke reduction and unchanged bleeding risk creates a compelling health-economic profile that could lower downstream costs of recurrent events while protecting quality of life. Bayer’s continued investment in this differentiated mechanism underscores its commitment to addressing persistent unmet needs in secondary stroke prevention.
For further details, read Bayer’s official announcement on the EMA validation.
Recent Posts

Dutch Medicine Access Delay Impact on Patient Care in the Netherlands

Transforming Clinical Skill Assessment with Intelligent Evaluation Systems
