In late 2024, Pfizer withdrew voxelotor (Oxbryta) from the market globally after concluding the risks outweighed the benefits. ASH Research Collaborative+1
That decision hit patients and clinicians hard—because many people had built their routine around it.

New real-world analysis: limited benefit, no clear harm signal

A more recent independent look using real-world electronic health record data (10,000+ patients, with a smaller voxelotor group) reported:

  • no significant decrease in pain crises compared to other disease-modifying therapies,

  • small improvements in hemoglobin and reticulocyte counts,

  • and no clear indicator of harm in the outcomes they analyzed. ASH Research Collaborative

That doesn’t undo the withdrawal—but it does help explain why this topic remains complicated and emotional: different datasets can highlight different risks/benefits.

If you or your loved one was on voxelotor

Here’s what we recommend from a practical standpoint:

  • Don’t stop or change meds without a prescriber.

  • Ask your hematology team:

    • “What’s our replacement plan?”

    • “How do we reduce crisis risk during transitions?”

    • “Do we need extra labs or follow-up visits?”

  • If you experienced worsening symptoms after stopping, document:

    • dates, ER visits, pain crisis frequency, transfusions, lab trends.

Treatment conversations to revisit

Many patients will be discussing combinations of:

  • hydroxyurea,

  • transfusion strategies,

  • newer therapies and clinical trials (depending on eligibility),

  • and non-medication supports (hydration plans, pain plans, trigger management).

Oklahoma-specific reminder

If your care access is limited by distance, scheduling, or insurance barriers, you’re not alone. We can help you:

  • organize records,

  • prepare questions,

  • identify support resources for travel/logistics.

Disclaimer: Educational content only; consult your healthcare team.