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According to the World Health Organization (WHO), six infectious diseases--pneumonia, tuberculosis, diarrheal diseases, malaria, measles and HIV/AIDS--account for half of all premature deaths worldwide, killing mostly children and young adults. What's more, threatening pandemics such as swine flu (H1N1 influenza A virus) are adding significant pressure to already strained healthcare budgets of governments around the world. This report provides a detailed description of the current infectious diseases drugs market and highlights the existing and developing anti-infective agents used to ameliorate diseases' afflictions on humankind. Anti-infective agents include: anti-viral therapeutics, antibiotics, anti-fungal agents and prophylactic treatments such as vaccines. Particular attention is paid to the clinical market segment and the pharmaceutical/biotechnology companies involved in anti-infective agents, with specific emphasis on each company's sales focus, product portfolio and R&D pipeline. To date, the most successful anti-infective agents target the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV, the virus that causes AIDS), the herpes virus (HSV-1 and HSV-2), bacterial infections and hepatitis C (HCV). A number of exciting novel anti-viral and antibiotic compounds are currently revolutionizing the infectious diseases drugs market, including Truvada and Valtrex, which are anti-HIV and anti-herpes therapies, respectively. Significant resources are also being dedicated toward hepatitis A (HAV), hepatitis B (HBV) and Staph infections, including MRSA. What's more, this study will examine the existing and developing anti-infective agents targeted at infectious diseases that continue to devastate developing countries, including: cholera, dengue fever, meningitis, rotavirus, typhoid, yellow fever and onchocerciasis ("river blindness").
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Table of Contents:
- 1. Overview 9
- 1.1 Statement of Report 9
- 1.2 Scope of the Report 9
- 1.3 Methodology 10
- 1.4 Executive Summary 11
- 2. Clinical Syndromes and Therapy 20
- 2.1 Head and Neck 22
- 2.1.1 Sinusitis 22
- 2.1.2 Pharyngotonsillitis 23
- 2.1.3 Deep Neck Infections 23
- 2.1.4 Otitis Media and Externa 23
- 2.1.5 Acute Suppurative Thyroiditis 23
- 2.2 Eye 24
- 2.2.1 Conjunctivitis 24
- 2.2.2 Keratitis 24
- 2.2.3 Iritis 24
- 2.2.4 Retinitis 25
- 2.2.5 Endophthalmitis 25
- 2.3 Skin and Lymph Nodes 25
- 2.3.1 Complicated Skin and Skin Structure Infections (cSSSI) 25
- 2.3.2 Lymphadenitis 25
- 2.4 Respiratory Tract 26
- 2.4.1 Bronchitis 26
- 2.4.2 Laryngitis 26
- 2.4.3 Pneumonia 26
- 2.4.4 Influenza 28
- 2.4.5 Avian Bird Flu 29
- 2.4.6 Swine Flu 29
- 2.4.7 Respiratory Syncytial Virus 33
- 2.4.8 Tuberculosis 33
- 2.5 Heart and Blood Vessels 37
- 2.5.1 Endocarditis 37
- 2.5.2 Acute Pericarditis 37
- 2.5.3 Myocarditis 37
- 2.5.4 Vascular Infections 37
- 2.6 Gastrointestinal Tract, Liver and Abdomen 38
- 2.6.1 Acute Viral Hepatitis 38
- 2.6.2 Chronic Hepatitis 38
- 2.6.3 Biliary Tract Infections 39
- 2.6.4 Pancreatitis 40
- 2.6.5 Esophageal Infections 40
- 2.6.6 Gastroenteritis 40
- 2.6.7 Peritonitis 41
- 2.7 Genitourinary Tract 42
- 2.7.1 Urethritis 42
- 2.7.2 Prostatitis 42
- 2.7.3 Urinary Tract Infections 43
- 2.7.4 Pelvic Inflammatory Disease 43
- 2.7.5 Candiduria 43
- 2.7.6 Human Papilloma Virus 43
- 2.8 Nervous System 44
- 2.8.1 Bacterial Meningitis 44
- 2.8.2 Viral Encephalitis 45
- 2.8.3 Reye's Syndrome 45
- 2.8.4 Myelitis and Peripheral Neuropathy 45
- 2.9 Musculoskeletal System 45
- 2.9.1 Osteomyelitis 45
- 2.9.2 Polyarthritis 46
- 2.9.3 Bursitis 46
- 2.9.4 Psoas Abscess 46
- 2.10 Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Infection 46
- 2.11 Blood-borne Infections 52
- 2.11.1 Malaria 52
- 2.11.2 West Nile Virus 55
- 3. Anti-infective Agents Market 57
- 3.1 FDA Approvals of New Anti-infective Therapy 59
- 3.2 Anti-infective Agents in Current Pharmaceutical Developmental Programs 67
- 3.3 Factors Determining Anti-infective Drug Development 69
- 3.4 Pharmaceutical R&D Expenditures 69
- 4. Description of Anti-infective Therapeutic Agents 71
- 4.1 Anti-bacterials 71
- 4.1.1 Anti-bacterial Therapeutic Agents in Current Formulation 74
- 4.1.1.1 β-lactam Antibiotics 75
- 4.1.1.2 Fluoroquinones 76
- 4.1.1.3 Glycopeptides 77
- 4.1.1.4 Macrolides 78
- 4.1.1.5 Oxazolidinones 79
- 4.1.1.6 Other Classes of Anti-bacterial Agents 80
- 4.1.2 Older Classes of Antibiotics 80
- 4.2 Anti-virals 81
- 4.2.1 Overview 81
- 4.2.2 Anti-viral Therapy 81
- 4.2.3 Anti-viral Market Leaders 82
- 4.2.4 Principles of Anti-viral Therapy 82
- 4.3 Anti-fungals 88
- 4.3.1 Overview 88
- 4.3.2 Major Classes of Anti-fungal Therapy 88
- 4.3.3 Anti-fungal Agent Resistance 89
- 4.3.4 Anti-fungal Agent Market Leaders 90
- 4.4 Vaccines 90
- 4.4.1 Overview 90
- 4.4.2 Principles of Vaccine Therapy 92
- 4.4.3 Vaccine Market Leaders 93
- 5. Market for Anti-infective Agents and Vaccines 96
- 5.1 Molecular Diagnostics in Determining Demand 96
- 6. Decision-making Activity in the Anti-infective Market 100
- 6.1 Net Present Value in Making Decisions to Develop and Market Antibiotics 101
- 7. Economics of Anti-microbial Drug Resistance: The Persistent need for Anti-bacterials 103
- 7.1 Resistance and Antibiotic Usage 106
- 8. Global Market Analysis of Anti-infective Agents 108
- 8.1 Market Size 108
- 8.2 Market Share 108
- 8.3 Market Drivers 110
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- 9. Global Market for Anti-bacterial Therapies 111
- 9.1 Amoxicillin 113
- 9.2 Nafcillin 113
- 9.3 Ticarcillin 113
- 9.4 Imipenem 114
- 9.5 Ceftriaxone 114
- 9.6 Cefotetan 114
- 9.7 Dalbavancin 115
- 9.8 Doripenem 115
- 10. Global Market for Anti-fungal Therapies 117
- 10.1 Amphotericin B 118
- 10.2 Azoles 118
- 10.3 Echinocandins 119
- 10.4 Flucytosine 119
- 11. Global Market for Anti-viral Therapies 120
- 11.1 Antiretroviral Market 120
- 11.1.1 The Viral Drug Resistance Crisis 120
- 11.1.2 Emtricitabine 123
- 11.1.3 CCR5 Receptor Antagonists 124
- 11.1.4 Non-nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NNRTIs) 124
- 11.2 HCV Infections 125
- 11.2.1 Pegintron Alpha 125
- 11.2.2 Ribavirin 126
- 11.2.3 Boceprevir 126
- 11.3 Acyclovir 126
- 11.4 Adefovir 126
- 11.5 Cidofovir 127
- 11.6 Entecavir 127
- 11.7 Fomivirsen 127
- 11.8 Foscarnet 127
- 11.9 Ganciclovir 127
- 12. Market, Demographic and Economic Trends 128
- 12.1 Emerging Trends in Infectious Diseases Worldwide 128
- 12.2 Global Burden of Infectious Disease 129
- 12.3 The AIDS Model 130
- 12.4 Dead-end Transmission of Zoonotic and Vector-borne Diseases 130
- 12.5 Environmentally Persistent Organisms 131
- 12.6 Old Microbes Cause New Disease 131
- 12.7 Microbial Agents and Chronic Diseases 131
- 12.8 Remerging and Resurging Infections 132
- 12.9 Geographical Spread of Infectious Disease 132
- 12.10 Drug-resistant Microbes 133
- 12.11 Opportunistic Re-emerging Infections 133
- 12.12 Re-emerging Zoonotic and Vector-borne Diseases 133
- 12.13 Influenza 133
- 12.14 Deliberately Emerging Infections 134
- 12.15 Meeting the Challenge of Emerging Diseases 134
- 13. Political/Legal Trends 135
- 13.1 AATF and Legislation 135
- 13.2 Bioterrorism and Biowarfare 137
- 14. Technological Trends 138
- 14.1 Anti-microbial Discovery in the Post-genomic Era 138
- 14.1.1 Anti-bacterial Polypharmacology 138
- 14.1.2 Topology of Targets 139
- 14.1.3 Designer Polypharmacology and Designing HIV-Therapies 139
- 15. Socio-Cultural Trends 140
- 16. Competitive Landscape 141
- 16.1 Introduction 141
- 16.2 Strengths and Weaknesses in Anti-microbial Drug Discovery-Commercial 142
- 16.3 Strengths and Weaknesses in Anti-microbial Drug Discovery-Academic 143
- 16.4 Regulatory Hurdles 143
- 16.5 Business Hurdles 144
- 16.6 Strategic Alliances, Licensing Activity, and Mergers & Acquisitions in the Anti-infectives Landscape 145
- 17. Sales Performance amongst the Leading Players: Detailed Analysis of Leading Anti-infective Players 148
- 17.1 GlaxoSmithKline 148
- 17.1.1 Overview 148
- 17.1.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 148
- 17.1.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 149
- 17.1.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 151
- 17.1.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 151
- 17.2 Merck 152
- 17.2.1 Overview 152
- 17.2.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 152
- 17.2.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 153
- 17.2.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 155
- 17.2.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 155
- 17.3 Pfizer 156
- 17.3.1 Overview 156
- 17.3.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 156
- 17.3.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 157
- 17.3.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 159
- 17.3.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 159
- 17.4 Novartis 160
- 17.4.1 Overview 160
- 17.4.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 160
- 17.4.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 160
- 17.4.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 161
- 17.4.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 162
- 17.5 Gilead Sciences 163
- 17.5.1 Overview 163
- 17.5.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 163
- 17.5.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 164
- 17.5.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 165
- 17.5.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 165
- 17.6 Abbott 165
- 17.6.1 Overview 165
- 17.6.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 166
- 17.6.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 166
- 17.6.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 167
- 17.6.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 167
- 17.7 Wyeth 167
- 17.7.1 Overview 167
- 17.7.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 168
- 17.7.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 168
- 17.7.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 169
- 17.7.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 169
- 17.8 Sanofi-Aventis 170
- 17.8.1 Overview 170
- 17.8.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 170
- 17.8.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 171
- 17.8.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 172
- 17.8.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 172
- 17.9 Bristol-Myers Squibb 173
- 17.9.1 Overview 173
- 17.9.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 173
- 17.9.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 173
- 17.9.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 174
- 17.9.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 174
- 17.10 Johnson & Johnson 175
- 17.10.1 Overview 175
- 17.10.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 175
- 17.10.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 175
- 17.10.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 176
- 17.10.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 176
- 17.11 Roche Pharma AG 177
- 17.11.1 Overview 177
- 17.11.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 177
- 17.11.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 178
- 17.11.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 178
- 17.11.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 179
- 18. Company Profiles 180
- 18.1 Abraxis BioScience, Inc. 180
- 18.2 Acambis 180
- 18.3 Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 180
- 18.4 Adlyfe, Inc. 181
- 18.5 Advanced Life Sciences Holdings, Inc. 182
- 18.6 Affinium Pharmaceuticals 182
- 18.7 Akonni Biosystems 182
- 18.8 Alnylam Pharmaceuticals 182
- 18.9 APP Pharmaceuticals 183
- 18.10 Aquapharm Biodiscovery 183
- 18.11 Arbor Vita Corporation 183
- 18.12 Arpida Ltd. 183
- 18.13 Avexa Ltd. 184
- 18.14 Basilea Pharmaceutica AG 184
- 18.15 Baxter International, Inc. 184
- 18.16 Biophage Pharma, Inc. 185
- 18.17 CEL-SCI Corporation 185
- 18.18 Cerexa, Inc. (Subsidiary of Forest Laboratories) 186
- 18.19 CombiMatrix Corporation 186
- 18.20 Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 187
- 18.21 Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd. 187
- 18.22 Hospira, Inc. 187
- 18.23 Incyte Corporation 188
- 18.24 Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 189
- 18.25 Medivir AB 189
- 18.26 Meiji Holdings Co., Ltd. 190
- 18.27 MerLion Pharmaceuticals 190
- 18.28 Mutabilis 190
- 18.29 NanoBio Corporation 191
- 18.30 Nanosphere, Inc. 191
- 18.31 Nanoviricides, Inc. 191
- 18.32 Novabay Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 191
- 18.33 Obetech, LLC 192
- 18.34 Optimer Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 192
- 18.35 Panacos Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 193
- 18.36 Paratek Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 193
- 18.37 Pharmasset, Inc. 193
- 18.38 Pico Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 194
- 18.39 PolyMedix, Inc. 194
- 18.40 PowderMed Ltd. (Subsidiary of Pfizer) 195
- 18.41 Presidio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 195
- 18.42 Progenics Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 195
- 18.43 Protez Pharmaceuticals (a Novartis Subsidiary) 196
- 18.44 Ribomed Biotechnologies, Inc. 196
- 18.45 Rib-X Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 196
- 18.46 Targanta Therapeutics Corporation, Inc. 197
- 18.47 Theravance, Inc. 197
- 18.48 Trius Therapeutics 197
- 18.49 Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 197
- 18.50 X-GEN Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 198
- Appendix 1: FDA Compliance Policies Regarding Approved New Drug and Antibiotic Drug Products 199
- Appendix 2: Anti-HCV Drugs in Development 201
- Appendix 3: The Market for Anti-infectives in Animal Health 204
- Appendix 4: Diagnostics for Infectious Agents 210
- INDEX OF FIGURES
- Figure 1.1: Leading Causes of Death in the U.S., 1958-2005 12
- Figure 1.2: Global Distribution of Anti-infective Agent Sales by Geography 15
- Figure 2.1: Incidence Rates of Invasive MRSA Infections by Age 20
- Figure 2.2: U.S. Child Death Rate from Preventable Diseases, 2007 22
- Figure 2.3: Infection Rate of Serotype 19A by Age Group in the U.S., 1998-2006 27
- Figure 2.4: U.S. Hospitalizations for Types of Respiratory Diseases in Children Under 15 Years of Age 27
- Figure 2.5: Economic Burden of Select Lung Diseases in the U.S., 2007 28
- Figure 2.6: Infection Rate of Invasive Pneumococcal Disease in the U.S., 1998-2006 28
- Figure 2.7: Status of H5N1 Avian Influenza, 2009 29
- Figure 2.8: Number of Reported and Confirmed Cases of Influenza H1N1 Strain Worldwide, 2009 31
- Figure 2.9: Distribution of H1N1 Flu in the U.S., August 2009 32
- Figure 2.10: Novel H1N1 Confirmed and Probable Case Rate in the U.S., By Age Group 32
- Figure 2.11: Number of Tuberculosis (TB) Cases among U.S. - and Foreign-born Persons, by Year Reported in the U.S., 1993-2008 34
- Figure 2.12: Rate of Tuberculosis (TB) Cases among U.S. - and Foreign-born Persons, by Year Reported in the U.S., 1993-2008 34
- Figure 2.13: Rate of Tuberculosis (TB) Cases by State/Area in the U.S., 2008 35
- Figure 2.14: U.S.-born TB Cases by Ethnicity, 2008 36
- Figure 2.15: Rate of New Hepatitis A, B and C Infections in the U.S., 1982-2006 38
- Figure 2.16: Countries Reporting Outbreaks of Cholera, 2006-2008 41
- Figure 2.17: U.S. Rates of Sexually-Transmitted Diseases, 1940-2007 42
- Figure 2.18: Rate of New Cases and Deaths of Cervical Cancer by Age Group Worldwide, 2008 44
- Figure 2.19: Global Trend of HIV Infection, 1991-2007 47
- Figure 2.20: Worldwide Percentage of Adults Living with HIV, 1990-2006 47
- Figure 2.21: Worldwide Rate of New HIV Cases, 1990-2007 48
- Figure 2.22: Percentage of Adult Population in African Countries with HIV, 2007 48
- Figure 2.23: Ethnic Distribution of AIDS Patients in the U.S., 2007 50
- Figure 2.24: Ten Best Selling AIDS Drugs in the U.S., 2008 50
- Figure 2.25: U.S. Rates for New HIV Cases, 2008 51
- Figure 2.26: Global Malaria-Endemic Areas in the Eastern Hemisphere 53
- Figure 2.27: Anti-Malarial Vaccine Pipeline, 2009 54
- Figure 2.28: Global Anti-Malarial Drug Pipeline, 2008 55
- Figure 2.29: West Nile Virus Activity in the U.S., 2009 56
- Figure 3.1: Anti-infective Drug Market Projections, 2006-2013 57
- Figure 3.2: Leading Companies in Anti-infectives Market Share, 2008 58
- Figure 3.3: Number of New Anti-bacterial Agents Approved by the FDA in the U.S., 1983-2008 61
- Figure 3.4: Total Spending on Healthcare in the U.S., 1960-2008 63
- Figure 3.5: Percentage Breakdown of U.S. Healthcare Spending, 2008 64
- Figure 3.6: International per Capita Healthcare Spending by Country, 2006 64
- Figure 3.7: Generic Drug Applications and Approvals in the U.S., 1995-2006 65
- Figure 3.8: Savings Generated by Generic Use in the U.S., by Therapeutic Category, 1999-2008 66
- Figure 3.9: Anti-bacterial and Anti-HIV New Molecular Entities (NMEs) Approved by the FDA, 1993-2007 69
- Figure 3.10: Cost for New Drugs by Primary Indication, 2007 70
- Figure 4.1: Market Share by Leading Anti-bacterial Drug Class 72
- Figure 4.2: Anti-virals in the Marketplace 81
- Figure 4.3: Anti-viral Market by Indication, Excluding HIV and HCV 82
- Figure 4.4: Anti-viral Therapeutics Market, by Drug Class 83
- Figure 4.5: Global Distribution of the Lack of Childhood Vaccination 91
- Figure 4.6: GAVI Alliance Members 92
- Figure 4.7: Global Vaccines Market, 2008 93
- Figure 4.8: GlaxoSmithKline's Vaccine Pipeline, 2008 94
- Figure 4.9: The Vaccine Market by Geographical Area, 2008 94
- Figure 5.1: Global Market for Molecular Diagnostics, 2002-2013 97
- Figure 6.1: Number of Non-elderly Americans without Health Insurance Coverage, 1994-2007 101
- Figure 6.2: Percentage of Non-elderly Americans without Health Insurance Coverage, 1994-2007 101
- Figure 7.1: Global Multidrug Susceptibility in P. aeruginosa 105
- Figure 7.2: Global Frequency of Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci, 2006 105
- Figure 7.3: MRSA Trends According to Patient Location, 1998-2005 106
- Figure 9.1: Projected Growth in Market for Injectable Anti-bacterials, 2008 and 2013 112
- Figure 9.2: Real and Projected Market Shares for Major Anti-bacterial Classes, 2008 and 2013 112
- Figure 9.3: Frequency of S. aureus in Skin and Soft Tissue Infections 115
- Figure 11.1: Current and Projected Market Size for Injectable Antiretrovirals by Class, 2008 and 2013 120
- Figure 11.2: Market Share for Injectable Antiretrovirals by Drug Class, 2008 121
- Figure 11.3: The Changing Face of the HCV Market: Growth and Projections by Drug Class, 2008 and 2013 125
- Figure A3.1: Growth in Global Sales of Antibiotic Products in Animal Health, 2005-2012 204
- Figure A4.1: FIND Pipeline for TB Diagnostics 221
- INDEX OF TABLES
- Table 1.1: Top Ten Causes of Death Worldwide 12
- Table 1.2: Leading Pharmaceutical Companies in the Anti-infective Market-Total Global Sales, 2008 16
- Table 2.1: Annual Rates of Global Infectious Diseases 21
- Table 2.2: Drugs in Development for Chronic Hepatitis B, 2009 39
- Table 2.3: Global HIV Statistics, 2007 49
- Table 3.1: Top Selling Anti-infective Agents, 2008 58
- Table 3.2: Sales for Leading Companies' Infectious Diseases Segments, 2008 59
- Table 3.3: Current Drug Development Times and Rates, by Therapeutic Indication 60
- Table 3.4: Emerging Therapeutic Approaches 60
- Table 3.5: New Drug Approvals in All Categories from FDA, 2000-2008 61
- Table 3.6: Top Ten Global Pharmaceutical Markets, 2008 62
- Table 3.7: BRIC Countries, Percentage of GDP Spent on Healthcare, 2008 62
- Table 3.8: Percentage of GDP Healthcare Spending by Country, 2008 63
- Table 3.9: Top 20 Generic Drugs by Prescriptions, 2008 66
- Table 3.10: Anti-bacterial Agents Undergoing Clinical Development 67
- Table 3.11 Leading Tuberculosis R&D Candidates 68
- Table 3.12: Pipeline for Repositioned Drugs 68
- Table 4.1: Potential Anti-bacterial Protein Drug Targets 73
- Table 4.2: In vitro Susceptibility of Staphylococci to New Agents in Development 73
- Table 4.3: Anti-staphylococcal Vaccines and Immunoglobulins in the Late Stage Pipeline, 2009 74
- Table 4.4: Bacterial Targets of Antibiotics and Resistance Mechanisms 74
- Table 4.5: Guideline Summary for Antibiotic Selection for Skin and Soft Tissue Infections 75
- Table 4.6: Selected Anti-viral Drugs 83
- Table 4.7: Anti-reterovirals in Development, 2008 83
- Table 4.8: New Types of HIV Drugs 84
- Table 4.9: Recommended Daily Dosage of Seasonal Influenza Anti-viral Medications for Treatment and Chemoprophylaxis in the U.S., 2008-2009 85
- Table 4.10: Percentage Drug Resistance for Common Influenza Virus Strains, 2009 86
- Table 4.11: Selected HCV Drugs in Development, 2009 87
- Table 4.12: Therapeutic Agents in Development for Treating Hepatitis B, 2008 88
- Table 4.13: Anti-fungal Compounds in Late Stage Development 89
- Table 4.14: New Vaccines Licensed, 2005-2008 91
- Table 4.15: Global Top Selling Blockbuster Vaccines, 2008 95
- Table 4.16: Selected Anti-infective Monoclonal Antibodies in Clinical Development, 2009 95
- Table 5.1: FDA-approved Commercial Kits for the Detection of Infectious Agents 97
- Table 5.2: Examples of Personalized Medicine in Treatment of Infectious Disease 98
- Table 6.1: Competitive Landscape for Anti-viral Drugs in Development, 2009 102
- Table 6.2: Competitive Landscape for Anti-biotic Drugs in Development, 2009 102
- Table 8.1 Anti-HIV Therapeutics Approved by the FDA 109
- Table 9.1: Major Classes of Antibiotics 111
- Table 10.1: Major Classes of Anti-fungals 117
- Table 11.1: CCR-5 Receptor Agonists in Development, 2009 124
- Table 12.1: Major Pathogens Identified in the Last 30 Years 129
- Table 12.2: Emerging and Re-emerging Infectious Diseases and their Geographical Location 132
- Table 16.1: Pharmaceutical Companies Ranked by Total R&D Expenditures, 2008 142
- Table 16.2: International Regulatory Measures Indicated by International Forum of Anti-bacterial Resistance 144
- Table A2.1: Anti-HCV Pipeline, 2009 201
- Table A3.1: U.S. Volume of Animal Health Antibiotics Used, 2000-2006 205
- Table A3.2: European Sales of Animal Health Antibiotics, 2005-2012 205
- Table A3.3: Use of Antibiotics as Growth Promotants 207
- Table A4.1: The Market Structure for Infectious Disease Diagnostics 211
- Table A4.2: Rapid Strep Tests on the Market 212
- Table A4.3: Rapid Tests for Chlamydia 214
- Table A4.4: Rapid Tests for Gonorrhea 216
- Table A4.5: The Burden of Influenza 217
- Table A4.6: Global Market Potential for TB Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2010 222
- Table A4.7: Global Market for HBV Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2012 225
- Table A4.8: U.S. Market for HBV Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2012 225
- Table A4.9: Serological Diagnosis of Hepatitis B Virus Infections 227
- Table A4.10: Lower Detection Limits of HBV DNA Assays 228
- Table A4.11: Type of Test: Lateral Flow 231
- Table A4.12: Type of Test: Flow-through 232
- Table A4.13: Type of Test: Agglutination 232
- Table A4.14: Type of Test: Immunoblot 232
- Table A4.15: Global Market for HCV Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2009 235
- Table A4.16: Efficiency of Available HCV Screening Tests 236
- Table A4.17: Recommendations for Diagnostic Testing for Hepatitis C 238
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