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Market Research Report

Vaccines Market Insight: Products, Pipelines & Market Outlook

Published by PJB Publications Ltd. Contact us : +1-860-674-8796
Published 2007/11 Content info Pages: 175
Product code PJB58832
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Abstract

Attitudes towards vaccination are changing, as the promise grows of candidate products in development which have the potential to prevent and treat some of the major diseases affecting the world' s population today. Immunisation, the World Health Organization argues, has proved itself: smallpox was eradicated worldwide in the late 1970s, Europe was declared free of polio at the turn of the 21st century and, in 2002 alone, an estimated two million lives were saved by immunisation. Years of disappointment, with vaccines for unmet needs failing in Phases II and III, are ending as new vaccines begin to reach the market and more advance through the pipeline.

In 2007, pre-teenage and teenage girls are being vaccinated against HPV, a known and common cause of cervical cancer, the second-largest cancer killer of women. In the next few years, approval is expected for vaccinations against other forms of cancer, including prostate, colon and lung cancers. There are also advanced candidates for influenza, malaria, tuberculosis, hepatitis B and HIV. Vaccines for rotavirus and meningitis A, diseases that kill vast numbers of children in the developing world each year, may not be far off and their development is being supported by public and private funding, in addition to fast-tracking rulings. Innovation by small biotechnology companies, financially and commercially supported by strategic alliances with the largest pharmaceutical companies, has led to the development of the therapeutic vaccine, which has the potential to treat rather than prevent disease and has given new hope to the sufferers of cancer, CNS disorders, autoimmune conditions and asthma, even addiction.

The largest section of the vaccination market is paediatric immunisation. Six vaccines are routinely given to children as part of their infant immunisation - these comprise vaccines against tuberculosis (BCG), diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio (OPV) and measles. However, not all children receive these immunisations and in some developed countries the number of children being vaccinated is dropping. These problems must be redressed in order to prevent the 30,000 deaths which are estimated to take place each day from entirely vaccine-preventable diseases. Other, newer vaccines are also available and need to be more widely used, including vaccines against yellow fever, rubella, hepatitis B, Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib) disease and Japanese encephalitis.

Adult vaccination is on the increase and now growing at a faster pace than paediatric immunisations. This is largely because of the recent emphasis placed on immunisation against influenza and hepatitis. Children will benefit from the development of new combination products while everyone will reap the benefits of alternative routes of delivery to needles.

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