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New Drug May Prevent Bleeding in Blood Thinner Patients

Discover a potential breakthrough in preventing internal bleeding for patients on blood thinners, and how it could impact your practice and patient care.

April 15, 2026
3 min read
437 words

Executive Brief

  • The News: CSL pays $117 million for VarmX option
  • Clinical Win: VMX-C001 may reverse Factor Xa inhibitors' bleeding risk
  • Target Specialty: Hematologists treating atrial fibrillation patients

Key Data at a Glance

Drug: VMX-C001

Indication: Reversal of Factor Xa inhibitors

Upfront Payment: $117 million

Potential Total Payments: $2.2 billion

Projected Patients on Factor Xa Inhibitors by 2030: 30 million

Phase: Phase 3 trial

New Drug May Prevent Bleeding in Blood Thinner Patients

Just weeks after announcing a major restructuring, Australian drugmaker CSL struck a deal that may lead to the acquisition of a Dutch biotechnology startup.

Under the terms announced Tuesday, CSL agreed to pay VarmX stockholders $117 million up front and fully fund the Phase 3 trial of VarmX’s lead medicine, VMX-C001, designed to treat and prevent episodes of internal bleeding for patients taking blood thinners. CSL will also handle manufacturing costs and other expenses associated with pre-launch activities.

In return, CSL will receive an exclusive option to buy VarmX, which could be exercised after seeing results from the Phase 3 trial. VarmX shareholders are eligible to receive another $388 million in payments before a potential commercial launch and as much as $1.7 billion based on how well the drug sells if it reaches the market.

CSL’s restructuring plans include laying off as much as 15% of its workforce, streamlining corporate functions and spinning off its vaccine business, Seqirus. The company expects the moves to eventually produce annual savings of as much as $550 million that can be used to help fund new business development deals, CEO Paul McKenzie told investors in August.

“We want to look at opportunities to enhance our clinical and commercial portfolios,” he said.

VarmX’s work fits well with CSL’s mission, McKenzie said in a statement announcing the new deal. CSL’s Behring business, which sells a variety of drugs for bleeding disorders, brings in most of the company’s revenue. And VarmX’s lead drug has the chance to “address a significant unmet need,” he said.

VMX-C001 is designed to reverse the effects of popular blood thinners known as Factor Xa inhibitors that include Xarelto and Eliquis. Factor Xa drugs have proven highly effective in reducing the risk of blood clots and will be taken by about 30 million people in the U.S., Europe and Japan by 2030 to treat conditions such as atrial fibrillation and deep vein thrombosis, according to VarmX.

But the drugs also carry a risk of life-threatening bleeding for a small portion of patients. VarmX says its medicine offers a chance for a single-dose reversal of the bleeding, restoring coagulation without posing an additional risk of thrombosis, or blood clots.

The safety profile, if it holds up in the Phase 3 trial, will be important because a higher risk of thrombosis helped tank another reversal agent sold by AstraZeneca’s Alexion division. AstraZeneca decided to stop promoting the medicine, known as Andexxa, after an FDA advisory panel raised safety questions about it in 2024. The drug’s original developer, Portola Pharmaceuticals, had also had trouble building a market for it.

Clinical Perspective — Dr. Nikhil Chatterjee, Pulmonology

Workflow: I'll be keeping a closer eye on patients taking Factor Xa inhibitors like Xarelto and Eliquis, as they'll be at risk of life-threatening bleeding - with around 30 million people in the U.S., Europe, and Japan expected to be on these medications by 2030. This means I'll need to be prepared to potentially reverse the effects of these blood thinners. With a drug like VMX-C001 in development, I'm hopeful for a single-dose reversal option.

Economics: The article doesn't address cost directly, but it does mention that CSL will pay $117 million up front and fund the Phase 3 trial of VMX-C001, with potential payments of up to $1.7 billion if the drug reaches the market. This significant investment suggests that CSL is betting on the potential of VMX-C001 to address a significant unmet need.

Patient Outcomes: If VMX-C001 is successful, it could offer a single-dose reversal of bleeding in patients taking Factor Xa inhibitors, which would be a significant improvement in patient care. With a small portion of patients on these medications at risk of life-threatening bleeding, a safe and effective reversal agent could greatly reduce this risk - and that's a tangible benefit for my patients.

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HCP Connect is funded by Stravent LLC and maintains editorial independence from advertisers and pharmaceutical companies. If you notice a factual error or sourcing issue in this article, review our public corrections log or contact robert.foster@straventgroup.com.

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