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Market Research Report
Stakeholder Opinions: Irritable Bowel Syndrome - Potentially profitable market is open for the taking
Published by
Datamonitor
Published
2007/06
Content info
Product code
DC53013
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Table of Contents
ABOUT DATAMONITOR HEALTHCARE
About the CNS pharmaceutical analysis team
CHAPTER 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Scope of the analysis
Datamonitor insight into the irritable bowel syndrome market
Contributing experts
CHAPTER 2 EPIDEMIOLOGY AND PATIENT SEGMENTATION
Definition of disorder
Irritable bowel syndrome is a functional gastrointestinal disorder
Diagnostic criteria separate this chronic condition from transient gut symptoms
Etiology
Irritable bowel syndrome is best considered as an interaction of biological and psychosocial factors
Prevalence of irritable bowel syndrome
A standardized approach is needed in epidemiological studies
Over 50 million adults suffer from IBS across the US and
Segmentation of the irritable bowel syndrome population
Segmentation by symptoms
Irritable bowel syndrome can be sub-classified based on predominant stool form
Alternating irritable bowel syndrome is the most common subtype reported
Abdominal pain is the most common symptom of irritable bowel syndrome
Segmentation by severity
Only a third of patients have moderate to severe irritable bowel syndrome
Segmentation by sex and age
The female-to-male ratio of IBS in the population is close to two
Co-morbidities of irritable bowel syndrome
High co-morbidity with other disorders
CHAPTER 3 PRESENTATION AND DIAGNOSIS
Presentation
Patient presentation rates are low
Abdominal pain is a common reason for consulting a physician
Diagnosis
There is no simple test for irritable bowel syndrome so diagnosis is based on symptoms
The Manning criteria helped identify the symptoms suggestive of irritable bowel syndrome
The Rome criteria have superseded the Manning criteria
Rome III attempts to deal with confusion regarding consistency of stools
Quality of life measures are useful for assessing severity
Within clinical practice, measures are rarely used to assess severity
Many irritable bowel syndrome sufferers remain undiagnosed
Irritable bowel syndrome management and referral patterns
The majority of patients present and are managed by primary care
CHAPTER 4 CURRENT TREATMENT
There is no cure for irritable bowel syndrome
Treatment guidelines
Guidelines recommend treatment strategy is based on nature and severity of symptoms
US guidelines are based on consensus documents and reviews of existing studies
Japanese guidelines
European guidelines suggest a similar approach to those in the US
Non-pharmacological management
Psychological and behavioral treatment
Pharmacological management
Pharmacological therapies are not normally recommended unless non-pharmacological therapies have proved ineffective
Laxatives are widely used in constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome
Antidiarrheal agents are widely used in diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome
Antispasmodics are the most common treatment for abdominal pain
Antidepressants treat multiple symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome
Serotonergic agents are a new approach to treating irritable bowel syndrome
Lotronex (alosetron)
Zelnorm (tegaserod)
CHAPTER 5 UNMET NEEDS AND MARKET OPPORTUNITIES
Diagnostic unmet needs
Public understanding of irritable bowel syndrome is poor
Improved patient-physician communication is a key goal
Disease awareness programs and celebrity endorsement drive public awareness
Direct-to-consumer advertising has helped increase awareness and presentation rates
Physicians frequently do not recognize irritable bowel syndrome as a ' distinct' disease
Continuing physician education is needed to improve diagnosis
Development of simple diagnostic guidelines could aid diagnosis
Therapeutic unmet needs
Few primary care physicians follow current treatment guidelines in clinical practice
Efficacy of current pharmacological therapies is unclear
Patient satisfaction with current therapies is low
CHAPTER 6 NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
Clinical trial design
Issues with and limitations of previous clinical trials for irritable bowel syndrome
EMEA has provided guidance on clinical trial design
A different trial design for short-term and long-term treatments is advocated
A broad spectrum of irritable bowel syndrome patients who meet Rome II criteria should be included
Primary and secondary efficacy endpoints should be included
Impact of safety issues with marketed therapies for future therapies
Pipeline in 2007
Pipeline overview
Key Phase III pipeline drugs
Cilansetron (KC-9946)
Ramosetron (YM-060)
Renzapride (ATL-1251)
Dexloxiglumide
Lubiprostone (SP1-0211)
Other pipeline drugs
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Journal papers
Websites
APPENDIX
Contributing experts
About Datamonitor
About Datamonitor Healthcare
About the Central Nervous System analysis team
Disclaimer
List of Tables
Table 1: Diagnostic criteria* for irritable bowel syndrome (Rome III criteria, C1)
Table 2: Summary of IBS epidemiology study design and results across the seven major markets, 2001-06
Table 3: Summary of IBS epidemiology study design and results for selected countries outside US, Japan and 5EU, 2004-06
Table 4: Prevalence of IBS in the US and 5EU markets, 2007
Table 5: Subtyping irritable bowel syndrome by predominant stool pattern
Table 6: The Bristol Stool Form Scale
Table 7: Proportion of sufferers with subtypes
Table 8: Subtyping of irritable bowel syndrome: current sufferers with no formal diagnosis
Table 9: The Manning criteria
Table 10: Features used to subclassify irritable bowel syndrome
Table 11: Type of healthcare professional seen for irritable bowel syndrome at any stage: percentage of subjects with current symptoms
Table 12: Components of the treatment strategy: US medical position statement for irritable bowel syndrome
Table 13: British Society of Gastroenterology guidelines for treatment of irritable bowel syndrome
Table 14: Pharmacological therapies used for the management of irritable bowel syndrome
Table 15: R&D pipeline in irritable bowel syndrome, 2007
List of Figures
Figure 1: Interaction between the brain, bowel and environment
Figure 2: Two-dimensional display of the four possible irritable bowel subtypes according to bowel form at a particular point in time
Figure 3: Novartis patient information website on irritable bowel syndrome
Related Report
Gastrointestinal Pharmaceuticals: Technologies and Markets
Inflammatory Bowel Disease Market Forecast
Forecast Insight: Inflammatory Bowel Disease - New product launches sustain long-term market growth
Nexium Case Study: Using Public Relations to Reach Diverse Patient Populations and Build Bridges Between Product Generations
Chinese Markets for Anti Peptic Ulcer Drugs
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