Pipeline and Commercial Insight: Alzheimer's Disease - Beta treatments on the horizon
market briefing
 
Report

Pipeline and Commercial Insight: Alzheimer's Disease - Beta treatments on the horizon (market briefing)Detailed analysis of the commercial opportunities and threats facing Alzheimer's disease therapeutics across the seven major markets, including a review of the late-stage development pipeline and sales forecasts for key drugs.

From:
$22800
 

Alzheimer's patients remain poorly treated and are growing in number. Currently, cholinesterase inhibitors and the more recent NMDA-receptor antagonists provide only moderate and temporary symptomatic benefit. By the end of the decade, however, drugs with the ability to slow the rate of disease progression are expected to be launched - most notably, the first beta-amyloid modulators.

Scope of this report
  • Overview of the epidemiology of Alzheimer's disease across the seven major markets and its diagnosis and management
  • Examination of the Alzheimer's disease pipeline with clinical and commercial profiles of late-stage candidates, incorporating Datamonitor opinion
  • Seven market sales forecasts, commercial potential and research/clinical/commercial assessment of late-stage products to 2014
  • Insight and commentary from qualitative interviews with Alzheimer's disease opinion leaders in the US, Europe and Japan
Research and analysis highlights

The Alzheimer's disease market is forecast to continue to expand significantly over the next ten years. Aided by growing elderly populations, successive product launches have seen global revenues grow at over 35% CAGR 200104.

A new phase in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease is expected to begin in 2009 with the launch of drugs that slow the progression of the disease - Alzhemed and Flurizan. Once launched, however, these drugs may not have long before further generations of disease modifying drugs arrive, pushing sales of Alzhemed and Flurizan into decline from 2013.

Clinical trial design will be key to the success of many new products. Trial duration must be appropriate for the drug's mechanism of action. Furthermore, selection of individuals from Alzheimer's disease subgroups or those more likely to get the disease, can lead to better efficacy demonstration and lower required recruitment numbers.

Key reasons to read this report
  • Understand concerns over efficacy of currently available therapies and the impact of this on AChEI use
  • Identify potential patient segments in Alzheimer's Disease for key late-stage compounds and rank future products
  • Assess the global sales forecasts of currently marketed products and evaluate the impact of generic galantamine
Report Details:
Publisher:
Datamonitor
Type:
Market Study - November 2005
Number of pages:
272
First Publication Date:
7/11/2005
 
 
 
Copyright © Chiltern Magazine Services Ltd | Email: admin@cmsinfo.com | Tel: +(1) 508 861 0401