Health | Genentech FDA Panel Rejects Breast Cancer Drug Uncertainties on risk sink bid to expand uses for Avastin By Sam Gale Rosen Posted Dec 5, 2007 4:34 PM CST Copied The Genentech Inc. headquarters are seen in South San Francisco, Calif., in this July 10, 2006 file photo. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, file) (Associated Press) An FDA panel rejected a drug to treat advanced breast cancer by 5-to-4 vote, the Wall Street Journal reports. The drug Avastin is already used to treat colon and lung cancer, but the panel said it did not have sufficient data to weigh the risks and benefits of using the drug to treat breast cancer. The FDA isn't required to follow the panel's recommendation, the Journal notes, but it usually does. One panelist, who voted against Avastin, said she saw too many issues with the data Genentech presented. "I think there are other agents out there that are available for this patient population," she said. Avastin is Genentech's second-best-selling drug, with sales of $1.7 billion in 2006. Read These Next Trump tells Washington's homeless to clear out. Analysis sees a historic shift underway in US capitalism. Explosion rocks steel plant near Pittsburgh. Jamie Lee Curtis is definitely no fan of this Freakier Friday review. Report an error