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Report Description

Infectious Diseases Drugs Markets
Publication Date: 01-OCT-09
Pages: 241
Study: TMRIDD
Format/Price: PDF document / $3,400.00
   


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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").





Table of Contents:

  1. 1. Overview 9
  2. 1.1 Statement of Report 9
  3. 1.2 Scope of the Report 9
  4. 1.3 Methodology 10
  5. 1.4 Executive Summary 11
  6. 2. Clinical Syndromes and Therapy 20
  7. 2.1 Head and Neck 22
  8. 2.1.1 Sinusitis 22
  9. 2.1.2 Pharyngotonsillitis 23
  10. 2.1.3 Deep Neck Infections 23
  11. 2.1.4 Otitis Media and Externa 23
  12. 2.1.5 Acute Suppurative Thyroiditis 23
  13. 2.2 Eye 24
  14. 2.2.1 Conjunctivitis 24
  15. 2.2.2 Keratitis 24
  16. 2.2.3 Iritis 24
  17. 2.2.4 Retinitis 25
  18. 2.2.5 Endophthalmitis 25
  19. 2.3 Skin and Lymph Nodes 25
  20. 2.3.1 Complicated Skin and Skin Structure Infections (cSSSI) 25
  21. 2.3.2 Lymphadenitis 25
  22. 2.4 Respiratory Tract 26
  23. 2.4.1 Bronchitis 26
  24. 2.4.2 Laryngitis 26
  25. 2.4.3 Pneumonia 26
  26. 2.4.4 Influenza 28
  27. 2.4.5 Avian Bird Flu 29
  28. 2.4.6 Swine Flu 29
  29. 2.4.7 Respiratory Syncytial Virus 33
  30. 2.4.8 Tuberculosis 33
  31. 2.5 Heart and Blood Vessels 37
  32. 2.5.1 Endocarditis 37
  33. 2.5.2 Acute Pericarditis 37
  34. 2.5.3 Myocarditis 37
  35. 2.5.4 Vascular Infections 37
  36. 2.6 Gastrointestinal Tract, Liver and Abdomen 38
  37. 2.6.1 Acute Viral Hepatitis 38
  38. 2.6.2 Chronic Hepatitis 38
  39. 2.6.3 Biliary Tract Infections 39
  40. 2.6.4 Pancreatitis 40
  41. 2.6.5 Esophageal Infections 40
  42. 2.6.6 Gastroenteritis 40
  43. 2.6.7 Peritonitis 41
  44. 2.7 Genitourinary Tract 42
  45. 2.7.1 Urethritis 42
  46. 2.7.2 Prostatitis 42
  47. 2.7.3 Urinary Tract Infections 43
  48. 2.7.4 Pelvic Inflammatory Disease 43
  49. 2.7.5 Candiduria 43
  50. 2.7.6 Human Papilloma Virus 43
  51. 2.8 Nervous System 44
  52. 2.8.1 Bacterial Meningitis 44
  53. 2.8.2 Viral Encephalitis 45
  54. 2.8.3 Reye's Syndrome 45
  55. 2.8.4 Myelitis and Peripheral Neuropathy 45
  56. 2.9 Musculoskeletal System 45
  57. 2.9.1 Osteomyelitis 45
  58. 2.9.2 Polyarthritis 46
  59. 2.9.3 Bursitis 46
  60. 2.9.4 Psoas Abscess 46
  61. 2.10 Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Infection 46
  62. 2.11 Blood-borne Infections 52
  63. 2.11.1 Malaria 52
  64. 2.11.2 West Nile Virus 55
  65. 3. Anti-infective Agents Market 57
  66. 3.1 FDA Approvals of New Anti-infective Therapy 59
  67. 3.2 Anti-infective Agents in Current Pharmaceutical Developmental Programs 67
  68. 3.3 Factors Determining Anti-infective Drug Development 69
  69. 3.4 Pharmaceutical R&D Expenditures 69
  70. 4. Description of Anti-infective Therapeutic Agents 71
  71. 4.1 Anti-bacterials 71
  72. 4.1.1 Anti-bacterial Therapeutic Agents in Current Formulation 74
  73. 4.1.1.1 β-lactam Antibiotics 75
  74. 4.1.1.2 Fluoroquinones 76
  75. 4.1.1.3 Glycopeptides 77
  76. 4.1.1.4 Macrolides 78
  77. 4.1.1.5 Oxazolidinones 79
  78. 4.1.1.6 Other Classes of Anti-bacterial Agents 80
  79. 4.1.2 Older Classes of Antibiotics 80
  80. 4.2 Anti-virals 81
  81. 4.2.1 Overview 81
  82. 4.2.2 Anti-viral Therapy 81
  83. 4.2.3 Anti-viral Market Leaders 82
  84. 4.2.4 Principles of Anti-viral Therapy 82
  85. 4.3 Anti-fungals 88
  86. 4.3.1 Overview 88
  87. 4.3.2 Major Classes of Anti-fungal Therapy 88
  88. 4.3.3 Anti-fungal Agent Resistance 89
  89. 4.3.4 Anti-fungal Agent Market Leaders 90
  90. 4.4 Vaccines 90
  91. 4.4.1 Overview 90
  92. 4.4.2 Principles of Vaccine Therapy 92
  93. 4.4.3 Vaccine Market Leaders 93
  94. 5. Market for Anti-infective Agents and Vaccines 96
  95. 5.1 Molecular Diagnostics in Determining Demand 96
  96. 6. Decision-making Activity in the Anti-infective Market 100
  97. 6.1 Net Present Value in Making Decisions to Develop and Market Antibiotics 101
  98. 7. Economics of Anti-microbial Drug Resistance: The Persistent need for Anti-bacterials 103
  99. 7.1 Resistance and Antibiotic Usage 106
  100. 8. Global Market Analysis of Anti-infective Agents 108
  101. 8.1 Market Size 108
  102. 8.2 Market Share 108
  103. 8.3 Market Drivers 110
  104. 9. Global Market for Anti-bacterial Therapies 111
  105. 9.1 Amoxicillin 113
  106. 9.2 Nafcillin 113
  107. 9.3 Ticarcillin 113
  108. 9.4 Imipenem 114
  109. 9.5 Ceftriaxone 114
  110. 9.6 Cefotetan 114
  111. 9.7 Dalbavancin 115
  112. 9.8 Doripenem 115
  113. 10. Global Market for Anti-fungal Therapies 117
  114. 10.1 Amphotericin B 118
  115. 10.2 Azoles 118
  116. 10.3 Echinocandins 119
  117. 10.4 Flucytosine 119
  118. 11. Global Market for Anti-viral Therapies 120
  119. 11.1 Antiretroviral Market 120
  120. 11.1.1 The Viral Drug Resistance Crisis 120
  121. 11.1.2 Emtricitabine 123
  122. 11.1.3 CCR5 Receptor Antagonists 124
  123. 11.1.4 Non-nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NNRTIs) 124
  124. 11.2 HCV Infections 125
  125. 11.2.1 Pegintron Alpha 125
  126. 11.2.2 Ribavirin 126
  127. 11.2.3 Boceprevir 126
  128. 11.3 Acyclovir 126
  129. 11.4 Adefovir 126
  130. 11.5 Cidofovir 127
  131. 11.6 Entecavir 127
  132. 11.7 Fomivirsen 127
  133. 11.8 Foscarnet 127
  134. 11.9 Ganciclovir 127
  135. 12. Market, Demographic and Economic Trends 128
  136. 12.1 Emerging Trends in Infectious Diseases Worldwide 128
  137. 12.2 Global Burden of Infectious Disease 129
  138. 12.3 The AIDS Model 130
  139. 12.4 Dead-end Transmission of Zoonotic and Vector-borne Diseases 130
  140. 12.5 Environmentally Persistent Organisms 131
  141. 12.6 Old Microbes Cause New Disease 131
  142. 12.7 Microbial Agents and Chronic Diseases 131
  143. 12.8 Remerging and Resurging Infections 132
  144. 12.9 Geographical Spread of Infectious Disease 132
  145. 12.10 Drug-resistant Microbes 133
  146. 12.11 Opportunistic Re-emerging Infections 133
  147. 12.12 Re-emerging Zoonotic and Vector-borne Diseases 133
  148. 12.13 Influenza 133
  149. 12.14 Deliberately Emerging Infections 134
  150. 12.15 Meeting the Challenge of Emerging Diseases 134
  151. 13. Political/Legal Trends 135
  152. 13.1 AATF and Legislation 135
  153. 13.2 Bioterrorism and Biowarfare 137
  154. 14. Technological Trends 138
  155. 14.1 Anti-microbial Discovery in the Post-genomic Era 138
  156. 14.1.1 Anti-bacterial Polypharmacology 138
  157. 14.1.2 Topology of Targets 139
  158. 14.1.3 Designer Polypharmacology and Designing HIV-Therapies 139
  159. 15. Socio-Cultural Trends 140
  160. 16. Competitive Landscape 141
  161. 16.1 Introduction 141
  162. 16.2 Strengths and Weaknesses in Anti-microbial Drug Discovery-Commercial 142
  163. 16.3 Strengths and Weaknesses in Anti-microbial Drug Discovery-Academic 143
  164. 16.4 Regulatory Hurdles 143
  165. 16.5 Business Hurdles 144
  166. 16.6 Strategic Alliances, Licensing Activity, and Mergers & Acquisitions in the Anti-infectives Landscape 145
  167. 17. Sales Performance amongst the Leading Players: Detailed Analysis of Leading Anti-infective Players 148
  168. 17.1 GlaxoSmithKline 148
  169. 17.1.1 Overview 148
  170. 17.1.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 148
  171. 17.1.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 149
  172. 17.1.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 151
  173. 17.1.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 151
  174. 17.2 Merck 152
  175. 17.2.1 Overview 152
  176. 17.2.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 152
  177. 17.2.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 153
  178. 17.2.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 155
  179. 17.2.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 155
  180. 17.3 Pfizer 156
  181. 17.3.1 Overview 156
  182. 17.3.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 156
  183. 17.3.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 157
  184. 17.3.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 159
  185. 17.3.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 159
  186. 17.4 Novartis 160
  187. 17.4.1 Overview 160
  188. 17.4.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 160
  189. 17.4.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 160
  190. 17.4.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 161
  191. 17.4.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 162
  192. 17.5 Gilead Sciences 163
  193. 17.5.1 Overview 163
  194. 17.5.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 163
  195. 17.5.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 164
  196. 17.5.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 165
  197. 17.5.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 165
  198. 17.6 Abbott 165
  199. 17.6.1 Overview 165
  200. 17.6.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 166
  201. 17.6.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 166
  202. 17.6.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 167
  203. 17.6.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 167
  204. 17.7 Wyeth 167
  205. 17.7.1 Overview 167
  206. 17.7.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 168
  207. 17.7.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 168
  208. 17.7.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 169
  209. 17.7.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 169
  210. 17.8 Sanofi-Aventis 170
  211. 17.8.1 Overview 170
  212. 17.8.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 170
  213. 17.8.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 171
  214. 17.8.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 172
  215. 17.8.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 172
  216. 17.9 Bristol-Myers Squibb 173
  217. 17.9.1 Overview 173
  218. 17.9.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 173
  219. 17.9.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 173
  220. 17.9.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 174
  221. 17.9.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 174
  222. 17.10 Johnson & Johnson 175
  223. 17.10.1 Overview 175
  224. 17.10.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 175
  225. 17.10.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 175
  226. 17.10.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 176
  227. 17.10.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 176
  228. 17.11 Roche Pharma AG 177
  229. 17.11.1 Overview 177
  230. 17.11.2 Sales Focus by Drug Class 177
  231. 17.11.3 Marketed Product Portfolio 178
  232. 17.11.4 R&D Pipeline Analysis 178
  233. 17.11.5 Strategic and Growth Analysis 179
  234. 18. Company Profiles 180
  235. 18.1 Abraxis BioScience, Inc. 180
  236. 18.2 Acambis 180
  237. 18.3 Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 180
  238. 18.4 Adlyfe, Inc. 181
  239. 18.5 Advanced Life Sciences Holdings, Inc. 182
  240. 18.6 Affinium Pharmaceuticals 182
  241. 18.7 Akonni Biosystems 182
  242. 18.8 Alnylam Pharmaceuticals 182
  243. 18.9 APP Pharmaceuticals 183
  244. 18.10 Aquapharm Biodiscovery 183
  245. 18.11 Arbor Vita Corporation 183
  246. 18.12 Arpida Ltd. 183
  247. 18.13 Avexa Ltd. 184
  248. 18.14 Basilea Pharmaceutica AG 184
  249. 18.15 Baxter International, Inc. 184
  250. 18.16 Biophage Pharma, Inc. 185
  251. 18.17 CEL-SCI Corporation 185
  252. 18.18 Cerexa, Inc. (Subsidiary of Forest Laboratories) 186
  253. 18.19 CombiMatrix Corporation 186
  254. 18.20 Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 187
  255. 18.21 Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd. 187
  256. 18.22 Hospira, Inc. 187
  257. 18.23 Incyte Corporation 188
  258. 18.24 Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 189
  259. 18.25 Medivir AB 189
  260. 18.26 Meiji Holdings Co., Ltd. 190
  261. 18.27 MerLion Pharmaceuticals 190
  262. 18.28 Mutabilis 190
  263. 18.29 NanoBio Corporation 191
  264. 18.30 Nanosphere, Inc. 191
  265. 18.31 Nanoviricides, Inc. 191
  266. 18.32 Novabay Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 191
  267. 18.33 Obetech, LLC 192
  268. 18.34 Optimer Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 192
  269. 18.35 Panacos Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 193
  270. 18.36 Paratek Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 193
  271. 18.37 Pharmasset, Inc. 193
  272. 18.38 Pico Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 194
  273. 18.39 PolyMedix, Inc. 194
  274. 18.40 PowderMed Ltd. (Subsidiary of Pfizer) 195
  275. 18.41 Presidio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 195
  276. 18.42 Progenics Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 195
  277. 18.43 Protez Pharmaceuticals (a Novartis Subsidiary) 196
  278. 18.44 Ribomed Biotechnologies, Inc. 196
  279. 18.45 Rib-X Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 196
  280. 18.46 Targanta Therapeutics Corporation, Inc. 197
  281. 18.47 Theravance, Inc. 197
  282. 18.48 Trius Therapeutics 197
  283. 18.49 Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 197
  284. 18.50 X-GEN Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 198
  285. Appendix 1: FDA Compliance Policies Regarding Approved New Drug and Antibiotic Drug Products 199
  286. Appendix 2: Anti-HCV Drugs in Development 201
  287. Appendix 3: The Market for Anti-infectives in Animal Health 204
  288. Appendix 4: Diagnostics for Infectious Agents 210
  289. INDEX OF FIGURES
  290. Figure 1.1: Leading Causes of Death in the U.S., 1958-2005 12
  291. Figure 1.2: Global Distribution of Anti-infective Agent Sales by Geography 15
  292. Figure 2.1: Incidence Rates of Invasive MRSA Infections by Age 20
  293. Figure 2.2: U.S. Child Death Rate from Preventable Diseases, 2007 22
  294. Figure 2.3: Infection Rate of Serotype 19A by Age Group in the U.S., 1998-2006 27
  295. Figure 2.4: U.S. Hospitalizations for Types of Respiratory Diseases in Children Under 15 Years of Age 27
  296. Figure 2.5: Economic Burden of Select Lung Diseases in the U.S., 2007 28
  297. Figure 2.6: Infection Rate of Invasive Pneumococcal Disease in the U.S., 1998-2006 28
  298. Figure 2.7: Status of H5N1 Avian Influenza, 2009 29
  299. Figure 2.8: Number of Reported and Confirmed Cases of Influenza H1N1 Strain Worldwide, 2009 31
  300. Figure 2.9: Distribution of H1N1 Flu in the U.S., August 2009 32
  301. Figure 2.10: Novel H1N1 Confirmed and Probable Case Rate in the U.S., By Age Group 32
  302. 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
  303. 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
  304. Figure 2.13: Rate of Tuberculosis (TB) Cases by State/Area in the U.S., 2008 35
  305. Figure 2.14: U.S.-born TB Cases by Ethnicity, 2008 36
  306. Figure 2.15: Rate of New Hepatitis A, B and C Infections in the U.S., 1982-2006 38
  307. Figure 2.16: Countries Reporting Outbreaks of Cholera, 2006-2008 41
  308. Figure 2.17: U.S. Rates of Sexually-Transmitted Diseases, 1940-2007 42
  309. Figure 2.18: Rate of New Cases and Deaths of Cervical Cancer by Age Group Worldwide, 2008 44
  310. Figure 2.19: Global Trend of HIV Infection, 1991-2007 47
  311. Figure 2.20: Worldwide Percentage of Adults Living with HIV, 1990-2006 47
  312. Figure 2.21: Worldwide Rate of New HIV Cases, 1990-2007 48
  313. Figure 2.22: Percentage of Adult Population in African Countries with HIV, 2007 48
  314. Figure 2.23: Ethnic Distribution of AIDS Patients in the U.S., 2007 50
  315. Figure 2.24: Ten Best Selling AIDS Drugs in the U.S., 2008 50
  316. Figure 2.25: U.S. Rates for New HIV Cases, 2008 51
  317. Figure 2.26: Global Malaria-Endemic Areas in the Eastern Hemisphere 53
  318. Figure 2.27: Anti-Malarial Vaccine Pipeline, 2009 54
  319. Figure 2.28: Global Anti-Malarial Drug Pipeline, 2008 55
  320. Figure 2.29: West Nile Virus Activity in the U.S., 2009 56
  321. Figure 3.1: Anti-infective Drug Market Projections, 2006-2013 57
  322. Figure 3.2: Leading Companies in Anti-infectives Market Share, 2008 58
  323. Figure 3.3: Number of New Anti-bacterial Agents Approved by the FDA in the U.S., 1983-2008 61
  324. Figure 3.4: Total Spending on Healthcare in the U.S., 1960-2008 63
  325. Figure 3.5: Percentage Breakdown of U.S. Healthcare Spending, 2008 64
  326. Figure 3.6: International per Capita Healthcare Spending by Country, 2006 64
  327. Figure 3.7: Generic Drug Applications and Approvals in the U.S., 1995-2006 65
  328. Figure 3.8: Savings Generated by Generic Use in the U.S., by Therapeutic Category, 1999-2008 66
  329. Figure 3.9: Anti-bacterial and Anti-HIV New Molecular Entities (NMEs) Approved by the FDA, 1993-2007 69
  330. Figure 3.10: Cost for New Drugs by Primary Indication, 2007 70
  331. Figure 4.1: Market Share by Leading Anti-bacterial Drug Class 72
  332. Figure 4.2: Anti-virals in the Marketplace 81
  333. Figure 4.3: Anti-viral Market by Indication, Excluding HIV and HCV 82
  334. Figure 4.4: Anti-viral Therapeutics Market, by Drug Class 83
  335. Figure 4.5: Global Distribution of the Lack of Childhood Vaccination 91
  336. Figure 4.6: GAVI Alliance Members 92
  337. Figure 4.7: Global Vaccines Market, 2008 93
  338. Figure 4.8: GlaxoSmithKline's Vaccine Pipeline, 2008 94
  339. Figure 4.9: The Vaccine Market by Geographical Area, 2008 94
  340. Figure 5.1: Global Market for Molecular Diagnostics, 2002-2013 97
  341. Figure 6.1: Number of Non-elderly Americans without Health Insurance Coverage, 1994-2007 101
  342. Figure 6.2: Percentage of Non-elderly Americans without Health Insurance Coverage, 1994-2007 101
  343. Figure 7.1: Global Multidrug Susceptibility in P. aeruginosa 105
  344. Figure 7.2: Global Frequency of Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci, 2006 105
  345. Figure 7.3: MRSA Trends According to Patient Location, 1998-2005 106
  346. Figure 9.1: Projected Growth in Market for Injectable Anti-bacterials, 2008 and 2013 112
  347. Figure 9.2: Real and Projected Market Shares for Major Anti-bacterial Classes, 2008 and 2013 112
  348. Figure 9.3: Frequency of S. aureus in Skin and Soft Tissue Infections 115
  349. Figure 11.1: Current and Projected Market Size for Injectable Antiretrovirals by Class, 2008 and 2013 120
  350. Figure 11.2: Market Share for Injectable Antiretrovirals by Drug Class, 2008 121
  351. Figure 11.3: The Changing Face of the HCV Market: Growth and Projections by Drug Class, 2008 and 2013 125
  352. Figure A3.1: Growth in Global Sales of Antibiotic Products in Animal Health, 2005-2012 204
  353. Figure A4.1: FIND Pipeline for TB Diagnostics 221
  354. INDEX OF TABLES
  355. Table 1.1: Top Ten Causes of Death Worldwide 12
  356. Table 1.2: Leading Pharmaceutical Companies in the Anti-infective Market-Total Global Sales, 2008 16
  357. Table 2.1: Annual Rates of Global Infectious Diseases 21
  358. Table 2.2: Drugs in Development for Chronic Hepatitis B, 2009 39
  359. Table 2.3: Global HIV Statistics, 2007 49
  360. Table 3.1: Top Selling Anti-infective Agents, 2008 58
  361. Table 3.2: Sales for Leading Companies' Infectious Diseases Segments, 2008 59
  362. Table 3.3: Current Drug Development Times and Rates, by Therapeutic Indication 60
  363. Table 3.4: Emerging Therapeutic Approaches 60
  364. Table 3.5: New Drug Approvals in All Categories from FDA, 2000-2008 61
  365. Table 3.6: Top Ten Global Pharmaceutical Markets, 2008 62
  366. Table 3.7: BRIC Countries, Percentage of GDP Spent on Healthcare, 2008 62
  367. Table 3.8: Percentage of GDP Healthcare Spending by Country, 2008 63
  368. Table 3.9: Top 20 Generic Drugs by Prescriptions, 2008 66
  369. Table 3.10: Anti-bacterial Agents Undergoing Clinical Development 67
  370. Table 3.11 Leading Tuberculosis R&D Candidates 68
  371. Table 3.12: Pipeline for Repositioned Drugs 68
  372. Table 4.1: Potential Anti-bacterial Protein Drug Targets 73
  373. Table 4.2: In vitro Susceptibility of Staphylococci to New Agents in Development 73
  374. Table 4.3: Anti-staphylococcal Vaccines and Immunoglobulins in the Late Stage Pipeline, 2009 74
  375. Table 4.4: Bacterial Targets of Antibiotics and Resistance Mechanisms 74
  376. Table 4.5: Guideline Summary for Antibiotic Selection for Skin and Soft Tissue Infections 75
  377. Table 4.6: Selected Anti-viral Drugs 83
  378. Table 4.7: Anti-reterovirals in Development, 2008 83
  379. Table 4.8: New Types of HIV Drugs 84
  380. Table 4.9: Recommended Daily Dosage of Seasonal Influenza Anti-viral Medications for Treatment and Chemoprophylaxis in the U.S., 2008-2009 85
  381. Table 4.10: Percentage Drug Resistance for Common Influenza Virus Strains, 2009 86
  382. Table 4.11: Selected HCV Drugs in Development, 2009 87
  383. Table 4.12: Therapeutic Agents in Development for Treating Hepatitis B, 2008 88
  384. Table 4.13: Anti-fungal Compounds in Late Stage Development 89
  385. Table 4.14: New Vaccines Licensed, 2005-2008 91
  386. Table 4.15: Global Top Selling Blockbuster Vaccines, 2008 95
  387. Table 4.16: Selected Anti-infective Monoclonal Antibodies in Clinical Development, 2009 95
  388. Table 5.1: FDA-approved Commercial Kits for the Detection of Infectious Agents 97
  389. Table 5.2: Examples of Personalized Medicine in Treatment of Infectious Disease 98
  390. Table 6.1: Competitive Landscape for Anti-viral Drugs in Development, 2009 102
  391. Table 6.2: Competitive Landscape for Anti-biotic Drugs in Development, 2009 102
  392. Table 8.1 Anti-HIV Therapeutics Approved by the FDA 109
  393. Table 9.1: Major Classes of Antibiotics 111
  394. Table 10.1: Major Classes of Anti-fungals 117
  395. Table 11.1: CCR-5 Receptor Agonists in Development, 2009 124
  396. Table 12.1: Major Pathogens Identified in the Last 30 Years 129
  397. Table 12.2: Emerging and Re-emerging Infectious Diseases and their Geographical Location 132
  398. Table 16.1: Pharmaceutical Companies Ranked by Total R&D Expenditures, 2008 142
  399. Table 16.2: International Regulatory Measures Indicated by International Forum of Anti-bacterial Resistance 144
  400. Table A2.1: Anti-HCV Pipeline, 2009 201
  401. Table A3.1: U.S. Volume of Animal Health Antibiotics Used, 2000-2006 205
  402. Table A3.2: European Sales of Animal Health Antibiotics, 2005-2012 205
  403. Table A3.3: Use of Antibiotics as Growth Promotants 207
  404. Table A4.1: The Market Structure for Infectious Disease Diagnostics 211
  405. Table A4.2: Rapid Strep Tests on the Market 212
  406. Table A4.3: Rapid Tests for Chlamydia 214
  407. Table A4.4: Rapid Tests for Gonorrhea 216
  408. Table A4.5: The Burden of Influenza 217
  409. Table A4.6: Global Market Potential for TB Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2010 222
  410. Table A4.7: Global Market for HBV Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2012 225
  411. Table A4.8: U.S. Market for HBV Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2012 225
  412. Table A4.9: Serological Diagnosis of Hepatitis B Virus Infections 227
  413. Table A4.10: Lower Detection Limits of HBV DNA Assays 228
  414. Table A4.11: Type of Test: Lateral Flow 231
  415. Table A4.12: Type of Test: Flow-through 232
  416. Table A4.13: Type of Test: Agglutination 232
  417. Table A4.14: Type of Test: Immunoblot 232
  418. Table A4.15: Global Market for HCV Diagnostic Testing, 2000-2009 235
  419. Table A4.16: Efficiency of Available HCV Screening Tests 236
  420. Table A4.17: Recommendations for Diagnostic Testing for Hepatitis C 238

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