Market insight in association witH

The Covid-19 treatment landscape is growing

Much of the emergency use authorization (EUA) issued by the FDA in tackling the coronavirus pandemic has thus far focused on diagnostic tests. While these tests serve as invaluable tools to address the pandemic, finding a cure to Covid-19 remains the ultimate goal.


Its elusiveness, however, has prompted many researchers to explore effective Covid-19 treatment options. A recent EUA for the use of convalescent plasma as a treatment option indicates a slow yet growing market for Covid-19 treatments and by extension a timely inflection point in the fight against the pandemic.


Convalescent plasma has been a well-established method for over a century in treating many viral diseases, including but not limited to SARS, measles, and polio. It is a form of passive immunity, where infected patients develop antibodies in their plasma as they recover and subsequently donate some of their plasma to accelerate other patients’ recovery.


Researchers from the Mayo Clinic who led the Expanded Access Program (EAP) reported that transfusing high antibody levels within three days of diagnosis resulted in reduced death rates. The report’s findings had contributed to the EUA of convalescent plasma treatment by the FDA, which comes at a pivotal time when currently existing Covid-19 treatment options and their efficacy are limited. GlobalData expects this EUA will provide much-needed relief for thousands of US patients infected with this disease.


According to GlobalData’s Covid-19 Dashboard, a cumulative number of 2 million patients have recovered from the virus in the US. Not all can donate their plasma, however, as there are several important requirements for donating, such as having sufficient antibody counts.


Furthermore, some patients may experience limited supplies of plasma, owing to blood type incompatibility. Despite these constraints, if all eligible convalescent patients were to donate their plasma on a recurring basis, a significant portion of the 3.5 million US patients currently with an active case could be treated.


As of now, few treatment options exist for Covid-19, none of which has been proven to effectively treat all cases. Remdesivir has been shown to accelerate patient recovery, albeit mostly for those who were treated early on in their infection.


Dexamethasone has been used to treat the hyper-immune responses that develop among some patients, but not the disease itself. A vaccine has yet to be developed, with questions regarding its cost, global access, and efficacy remaining unanswered. This highlights the dire need for additional treatment options to be made available immediately, and the FDA has clearly addressed this challenge with this recent EUA.

For more insight and data, visit GlobalData's Medical Intelligence Centre

Go to article: Home | Is medical AI racist?Go to article: In This IssueGo to article: NSFGo to article: ContentsGo to article: Formacoat Company InsightGo to article: FormacoatGo to article: NewsGo to article: Sandvik Company InsightGo to article: Sandvik Go to article: Coronavirus Executive BriefingGo to article: BioInteractions Company Insight Go to article: BioInteractions Go to article: uvexGo to article: Covid-19 pandemic has prompted rural hospitals to adopt EHR platformsGo to article: Mi3 Medical IntelligenceGo to article: Swisstec 3DGo to article: The Covid-19 treatment landscape is growingGo to article: Mecmesin Company InsightGo to article: MecmesinGo to article: Industrial Engineering Group Go to article: Multi-pronged approach needed to restore consumer confidence in safety of elective proceduresGo to article: Asahi InteccGo to article: KSP Go to article: Wearable technology market to reach $64bn by 2024 in spite of turbulence caused by Covid-19Go to article: SemecsGo to article: Covid-19 testing still mattersGo to article: PSN LabsGo to article: ProByLas Company Insight Go to article: The medical industry briefingGo to article: ESMAGo to article: Chromatic 3D MaterialsGo to article: Does the vaginal speculum need a redesign?Go to article: AerotechGo to article: REL8Go to article: A race to the bottom: how AI encodes racial discrimination within medicineGo to article: Watlow Company Insight Go to article: WatlowGo to article: PPE shortage? Mini factories could be the answerGo to article: CoherentGo to article: INDO-MIMGo to article: Building blocks: 3D-printed ‘bone bricks’ could help save limbsGo to article: Industrial Indexing Systems Company Insight Go to article: Industrial Indexing SystemsGo to article: iFixit: how uncaging equipment repair could transform med techGo to article: How do you build a secure contact tracing app?Go to article: ElectroCraftGo to article: TiodizeGo to article: SIM AutomationGo to article: Power up: self-charging medical devices could be on the wayGo to article: Helbling Go to article: Bioinicia Go to article: CureApp: could digital therapeutics be a lifeline for NASH patients?Go to article: ICF MercantileGo to article: The key list powered by GlobalDataGo to article: STSGo to article: Deals in brief powered by GlobalDataGo to article: AccumoldGo to article: Global markets and indices powered by GlobalDataGo to article: Macro-economic indicators (1 of 2 ) powered by GlobalDataGo to article: Macro-economic indicators (2 of 2) powered by GlobalDataGo to article: mdi ConsultantsGo to article: EventsGo to article: Electronic Sensor TechnologyGo to article: Next Issue