Manufacturing Fixed, But Now the FDA Wants Better Data
Atara Biotherapeutics (ATRA) received its second FDA Complete Response Letter for Ebvallo (tabelecleucel) on January 9, 2026, and this one stings differently than the first. The drug is a novel second-line immunotherapy designed to treat Epstein-Barr virus-positive post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease, a rare but serious condition that can develop after organ transplants.
Here's the twist: Atara actually fixed the problem from the first rejection. The original CRL, issued on January 15, 2025, flagged a single manufacturing compliance deficiency and specifically didn't raise concerns about safety, efficacy, or trial design. So the company went ahead and addressed it.
But in the new letter, the FDA essentially moved the goalposts. The manufacturing issues are resolved, sure, but now the agency says the ALLELE trial — the Phase 3, single-arm, open-label study (NCT03394365) supporting the application — isn't interpretable enough to support accelerated approval.
What the Trial Showed and Why the FDA Changed Its Mind
The ALLELE trial met its prespecified primary efficacy endpoint and showed a generally tolerable safety profile. That's the good news. The bad news is that the FDA now believes the trial design, conduct, and analysis create interpretability issues that make the dataset insufficient for approval.
This isn't about the drug failing or being unsafe. It's about the FDA deciding that the existing evidence, structured the way it was, doesn't meet the bar anymore. Essentially, the agency wants cleaner data with less room for confounding factors — which likely means a randomized or more rigorous confirmatory trial design.




