Chronic Hepatitis B - Market Insight, Epidemiology And Market Forecast - 2032

Chronic Hepatitis B - Market Insight, Epidemiology And Market Forecast - 2032



Key Highlights

People infected with Chronic Hepatitis B often have no symptoms, which may be the primary cause of the low diagnosis rate across the 7MM since many people go undiagnosed.

In 2022, the market size of Chronic Hepatitis B was highest in the US among the 7MM accounting for approximately USD 1,500 million, is expected to increase by 2032.

Gilead Science’s VEMLIDY (tenofovir alafenamide) is the only approved drug for adults and pediatric patients aged 12 with compensated liver disease.

Most of the treatment guidelines like AASLD, APASL, EASL, and WHO recommend entecavir (ETV), VIREAD (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate), and VEMLIDY (tenofovir alafenamide) as the first choice of treatment regimens and the market is currently dominated by ETV and TDF.

VEMLIDY (tenofovir alafenamide) is progressively entering the Hepatitis B market, but the uptake is not so fast, particularly in European nations.

The advantage of VEMLIDY over VIREAD is that VEMLIDY is less likely to cause unfavorable changes in kidney and bone biomarkers as it could treat the Hepatitis B virus at less than 1/10 the dose of VIREAD.

VEMLIDY is expected to lose patent protection in 2025 in the US and 2026 in Europe.

Other emerging therapies such as GSK’s bepirovirsen (monotherapy, bepirovirsen + peginterferon a2a, GSK3528869A ± bepirovirsen), Ascletis’s envafolimab, Vir Biotechnology’s VIR-3434 + VIR-2218 + peginterferon a2a, Janssen and Arrowhead Pharmaceutical’s JNJ-73763989 + peginterferon a2a + Nucleoside and nucleotide analogs have the potential to create a significant positive shift in the Chronic Hepatitis B market size.

DelveInsight’s “Chronic Hepatitis B – Market Insight, Epidemiology, and Market Forecast – 2032” report delivers an in-depth understanding of the Chronic Hepatitis B, historical and forecasted epidemiology as well as the Chronic Hepatitis B market trends in the United States, EU4 (Germany, France Italy, and Spain) and the United Kingdom, and Japan.

The Chronic Hepatitis B market report provides current treatment practices, emerging drugs, market share of individual therapies, and current and forecasted 7MM Chronic Hepatitis B market size from 2019 to 2032. The report also covers current Chronic Hepatitis B treatment practices/algorithms and unmet medical needs to curate the best opportunities and assess the market’s underlying potential.

Geography Covered

The United States

EU4 (Germany, France, Italy, and Spain) and the United Kingdom

Japan

Study Period: 2019–2032

Chronic Hepatitis B Disease Understanding and Treatment Algorithm

Chronic Hepatitis B Overview

Hepatitis B is a potentially life-threatening and one of the most common liver infections caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV), which attacks and injures the liver. Hepatitis B is a “silent epidemic” because most people do not exhibit symptoms when newly or chronically infected. As a result, they have the potential to unintentionally infect others and prolong the slow spread of hepatitis B. If an individual suffers from a Hepatitis B virus infection that lasts more than 6 months, the infection becomes chronic.

Chronic Hepatitis B increases the risk of developing liver failure, liver cancer, or cirrhosis. The risk of developing a Chronic hepatitis B infection is also directly related to the age at which one first becomes exposed to the hepatitis B virus. Males are more prone to develop Chronic hepatitis B.

Chronic Hepatitis B Diagnosis

Since it is impossible to distinguish between hepatitis B and other viral hepatitis based on clinical findings, laboratory confirmation of the diagnosis is crucial. The diagnosis of Chronic Hepatitis B is based on results from tests assessing as anti-HBc IgG, HBeAg, HBsAg quantitative, ALT, AST, AFP, and others. For chronic cases, a liver biopsy may be needed.

The initial evaluation should include a focused clinical history, physical examination, assessment of liver disease activity and severity, and markers of HBV infection. Sometimes an anti-HBc IgM or anti-HBc IgG blood test is to clarify if a person has a new “acute” or “chronic” infection. A positive/reactive anti-HBc IgG test usually indicates a chronic infection.

The patient’s journey begins with a referral to a hepatologist/gastroenterologist. However, the current approach to diagnosing these patients is similar to WHO guidelines, based on an assessment of laboratory parameters. WHO recommends that all adults have access to and be offered HBsAg testing with linkage to prevention, care, and treatment services as needed.

In addition, WHO recommends that all infants receive the hepatitis B vaccine as soon as possible after birth, preferably within 24 h, followed by two or three doses of the hepatitis B vaccine at least 4 weeks apart to complete the vaccination series. No booster vaccinations are required for those who have completed the three-dose vaccination schedule.

The American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) guidelines focus on screening, counseling, prevention, specialized virological/serological tests, and monitoring untreated patients. Screening is recommended in all persons born in countries with an HBsAg seroprevalence of 2%.

Further details related to country-based variations are provided in the report.

Chronic Hepatitis B Treatment

Based on real-world-prescription pattern analysis, patients suffering from Chronic Hepatitis B receive treatment with certain drugs such as pegylated interferon, interferon alpha, entecavir (ETV), VIREAD (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate), and VEMLIDY (tenofovir alafenamide), and other antiviral drugs (lamivudine, telbivudine, and adefovir dipivoxil).

In 2016, the WHO planned to eliminate Chronic Hepatitis B by 2030 due to its public health threat. With the development of antiviral therapies in the past decade, the treatment goal for chronic hepatitis B has been elevated beyond viral suppression (i.e., sustained undetectable HBV DNA levels) and seroconversion/loss of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg). The US Chronic Hepatitis B Market over the next few years is expected to substantially change and experience growth, as the use of interferon followed by TDF will dominate it. We have also anticipated the launch of an emerging product in the US market. VEMLIDY is expected to capture share mainly from its predecessor VIREAD and is expected to peak by 2025 in the US before the generics are expected to enter from 2025.

Notably, most infected individuals had a fairly low chance of a cure with the currently available antiviral drugs. However, novel therapies aimed at functional cures are under active development. Emerging drugs and therapies may play a vital role in suppressing HBV DNA and RNA, producing a meaningful decline in HBsAg levels and restoring HBV-specific immune responses. Developing combination strategies toward a functional cure would dramatically reduce the disease burden associated with Chronic Hepatitis B infection. Novel drugs and therapies of innovative molecules will ultimately lead to the functional cure of Chronic Hepatitis B in the near future.

Chronic Hepatitis B Epidemiology

As the market is derived using the patient-based model, the Chronic Hepatitis B epidemiology chapter in the report provides historical as well as forecasted epidemiology segmented by Total Prevalent Cases of Chronic Hepatitis B, Total Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Chronic Hepatitis B, Gender-specific Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Chronic Hepatitis B, Age-specific Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Chronic Hepatitis B, Type-specific Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Chronic Hepatitis B, and Total Treated Cases of Chronic Hepatitis B in the 7MM covering the United States, EU4 (Germany, France, Italy, and Spain) and the United Kingdom, and Japan from 2019 to 2032.

The total prevalent cases of Chronic Hepatitis B in the 7MM comprised approximately 56,333,000 cases in 2022 and are projected to decrease during the forecast period

The total prevalent cases of Chronic Hepatitis B in the United States were around 22,56,700 cases in 2022.

In the United States, approximately 55% of the patient share is attributed to males, whereas around 40% of females suffer from Chronic Hepatitis B.

Among the EU4, Germany accounted for the largest number of Chronic Hepatitis B cases, followed by France, whereas Spain accounted for the lowest number of cases in 2022.

According to DelveInsight estimates, there were around 3,04,900 and 53,800 cases of compensated and decompensated liver in Japan in 2022. These cases are projected to increase during the forecast period.

Chronic Hepatitis B Drug Chapters

The drug chapter segment of the Chronic Hepatitis B report encloses a detailed analysis of Chronic Hepatitis B marketed drugs and late-stage (Phase-III and Phase-II) pipeline drugs. It also helps understand the Chronic Hepatitis B clinical trial details, expressive pharmacological action, agreements and collaborations, approval and patent details, advantages and disadvantages of each included drug and the latest news and press releases.

Marketed Drugs

VEMLIDY (tenofovir alafenamide): Gilead Sciences

VEMLIDY is an HBV nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitor. It is approved for treating Chronic Hepatitis B infection in adults and pediatric patients 12 years and older with compensated liver disease.

Recently, VEMLIDY received approval for pediatric patients 12 years and older with Chronic Hepatitis B infection with compensated liver disease in November 2022 in the United States. However, the drug was first approved in the United States and Japan, followed by approvals in the EU (2017) for adult patients with Chronic Hepatitis B.

VEMLIDY is more stable than VIREAD in plasma and delivers the active metabolite to hepatocytes more efficiently, allowing a lower dose with similar antiviral activity and less systemic exposure.

Within the HBV space, the growth of VEMLIDY’s sales is due to higher sales volume in certain international locations. Also, VEMLIDY’s sales growth contrasts with the decline of sales of other leading drugs, such as VIREAD and BARACLUDE, in the hepatitis B treatment market. Besides VEMLIDY’s expected patent expiry in 2025 for the United States market, the drug might face competition from therapies such as GSK’s bepirovirsen, Janssen Research & Development’s JNJ-73763989, and others.

Note: Detailed current therapies assessment will be provided in the full report of Chronic Hepatitis B.

Emerging Drugs

Bepirovirsen (GSK3228836): GlaxoSmithKline/Ionis Pharma

Bepirovirsen (GSK3228836) is an investigational antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) designed to specifically recognize the RNA that the hepatitis B virus uses to replicate itself in the infected liver cells (hepatocytes) and make the viral antigens (proteins) that facilitate chronicity of the disease by helping avoid clearance by the immune system. The assets were in-licensed by GSK from Ionis Pharmaceuticals in August 2019.

The drug potentially could be a next therapy competitor. The company is running trials as monotherapy and in combination. This drug is being evaluated in Phase III and two Phase II clinical trials for patients with active Chronic Hepatitis B. Recently, it completed a Phase II B-Clear study. The results demonstrated promising results suggesting the drug can suppress both the surface antigen and the virus of hepatitis B, leading to the possibility of a functional cure. These encouraging data support further investigation of bepirovirsen, both as monotherapy and combination, as a potentially transformative new treatment option for patients with Chronic Hepatitis B.

The drug is expected to launch by 2026 for a monotherapy regimen. Likewise, even the key opinion Leaders (KOLs) were bullish when the data was presented, stating that “Reduction in hepatitis B surface antigen and HBV DNA to below the lower limit of quantification has the potential to be clinically meaningful and lead to a functional cure. This could help people living with Chronic Hepatitis B and healthcare providers manage the long-term consequences of Chronic Hepatitis B, including the social burden and the risk of developing life-threatening liver complications.”

Note: Detailed emerging therapies assessment will be provided in the final report.

Drug Class Insights

The existing Chronic Hepatitis B treatment is mainly dominated by antiviral drugs such as entecavir, VEMLIDY, VIREAD, telbivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, and lamivudine.

Lamivudine was the first NA to be given the go-ahead by US FDA for treating Chronic hepatitis B. The drug was given adult approval in 1998, while pediatric approval for children aged 2–17 was given in 2001. But since 1995, this drug has been used and licensed for treating HIV infection. With few side effects, it can be used successfully in various patients. However, lamivudine therapy for a prolonged time is linked to significant rates of drug resistance, which cause virological relapse and biochemical flare. Lamivudine is suggested as a second-line therapy for managing Hepatitis B.

Adefovir, the second NA licensed for treating Chronic Hepatitis B, is furthermore efficacious in both Chronic Hepatitis B with HBeAg positivity and HBeAg negativity. To treat Chronic Hepatitis B, adefovir dipivoxil was granted a license in the US in 2002 under the name HEPSERA. The high risk of nephrotoxicity at high dosages of this candidate, which was also initially developed as an antiviral medication for HIV infection, led to its abandonment. This candidate received European Commission approval in 2003, and GlaxoSmithKline markets the drug in Japan. In 2008, Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate was approved for adults with Chronic Hepatitis B infection. Although tenofovir is similar in structure to adefovir, it has lower nephrotoxicity than adefovir. Thus, a higher dose is used for treatment.

In addition, the once-daily oral NA reverse transcriptase inhibitor VEMLIDY (tenofovir alafenamide) inhibits reverse transcriptase, a key enzyme in Chronic Hepatitis B infection and HIV infection. VEMLIDY is approved for treating Chronic Hepatitis B in people with compensated liver disease in the US.

Moving onto Interferon, IFN-a and its pegylated form have been used for over 30 years to treat Chronic Hepatitis B with the advantages of finite treatment duration and sustained virologic response; however, the efficacy is limited, and side effects are common. Standard PEG-IFN monotherapy is administered once weekly as an SC injection for 48 weeks, with the advantages of finite treatment duration and sustained virologic response. In addition, treatment by PEG-IFN has been suggested to be associated with a lower incidence of Hepatocellular Carcinoma than NAs treatment in Chronic Hepatitis B infection. IFN-a treatment can induce an antiviral state in hepatocytes by regulating gene expression and protein translation, which exert non-cytolytic antiviral effects in several stages of the Hepatitis B virus life cycle.

Moreover, the upcoming treatment landscape is poised to see further expansion after the emergence of new classes such as HBsAg/Antisense Oligonucleotide, Programmed Death-Ligand 1 Inhibitor, siRNA, and others.

Chronic Hepatitis B Market Outlook

Chronic Hepatitis B treatment in the US is entering a new era with changing dynamics. To this date, several drugs have been approved by the US FDA to treat Chronic Hepatitis B: interferon-alpha and pegylated interferon-alpha, nucleoside analogs (NA), and nucleotide analog prodrugs. Oral antiviral medications include VIREAD (tenofovir disoproxil), VEMLIDY (tenofovir alafenamide), BARACLUDE (entecavir), TYZEKA or SEBIVO (telbivudine), HEPSERA (adefovir dipivoxil), and lamivudine (Epivir-HBV, Zeffix, or Heptodin). The aforementioned therapies help fight the virus and slow its ability to damage the liver.

It is worth mentioning that the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) presently recommends tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, entecavir, and, more recently, tenofovir alafenamide as the preferred first-line oral antiviral treatments for Chronic Hepatitis B. According to the European Association for the Study of the Liver’s (EASL) recommendations, entecavir, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, and tenofovir alafenamide are favored regimens in addition to the AASLD as one of the preferred first-line therapies to treat Chronic Hepatitis B.

As per the WHO’s latest updates on hepatitis B, Chronic Hepatitis B infection can be treated with either pegylated interferon or oral antiviral agents. These treatments are expected to slow the progression of cirrhosis, reduce the incidence of liver cancer and improve long-term survival. Only a proportion (estimates vary from 10% to 40% depending on setting and eligibility criteria) of people with Chronic Hepatitis B infection will require treatment. And this might be one reason for the low treatment observed across the secondary findings.

The current market has been segmented into different commonly used drugs based on the prevailing treatment pattern across the 7MM, presenting minor variations in the overall prescription pattern. Interferons (pegylated interferon and interferon alpha), entecavir, VEMLIDY, VIREAD, and other antiviral drugs (telbivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, and lamivudine) are the major drugs that have been covered in the forecast model.

The expected launch of upcoming therapies and greater integration of early patient screening, medication in secondary care and other clinical settings, research on best methods for implementation, and an upsurge in awareness will eventually facilitate the development of effective treatment options. However, there are a few roadblocks regarding the timely diagnosis and treatment of these patients, for instance, entry of generics due to the expiration of the patent protection and increasing healthcare expenses because the current treatment is lifelong. These factors often become a hindrance when adopting newer therapies.

Key players such as GlaxoSmithKline (bepirovirsen; GSK3528869A), Beijing Continent Pharmaceutical (hydronidone), Ascletis (ASC22), Vir Biotechnology (VIR-2218), Brii Biosciences (BRII-835 [VIR-2218]; BRII-179), Janssen Research & Development (JNJ-73763989), and several others are evaluating their lead candidates in different stages of clinical development, respectively. They aim to investigate their products for the treatment of Chronic Hepatitis B.

However, to ascertain the success rate of these medications and their effectiveness in causing a long-lasting functional cure, larger, longer, and well-designed clinical studies are required. Given the intricacy of Chronic Hepatitis B, the future of Hepatitis B virus treatments is probably in the combination of novel drugs with various modalities, particularly if the eradication of cccDNA is the ultimate objective.

The total market size of Chronic Hepatitis B in the 7MM is approximately USD 1,500 million in 2022 and is projected to increase during the forecast period (2023–2032).

The market size in the 7MM will increase at a CAGR of 24% due to increasing awareness of the disease and WHO initiatives and the launch of the emerging therapy aiming at a functional cure.

Among EU4, Germany accounts for the maximum market size in 2022, while Spain occupied the bottom of the ladder in 2022.

By 2032, among all the emerging therapies, the highest revenue will be generated by the bepirovirsen + peginterferon a2a combination in the 7MM.

Chronic Hepatitis B Drugs Uptake

This section focuses on the uptake rate of potential drugs expected to launch in 2019–2032. For example, for bepirovirsen, the company is running trials in different combinations such as bepirovirsen + peginterferon a2a, monotherapy, and GSK3528869A ± bepirovirsen; and it expect the drug uptake to be medium with a probability-adjusted peak share of 6.4%, years to the peak is expected to be 5 years from the year of launch for monotherapy.

Further detailed analysis of emerging therapies drug uptake in the report…

Chronic Hepatitis B Pipeline Development Activities

The report provides insights into different therapeutic candidates in Phase III, Phase II, and Phase I stage. It also analyzes key players involved in developing targeted therapeutics.

Pipeline Development Activities

The report covers information on collaborations, acquisitions and mergers, licensing, and patent details for Chronic Hepatitis B emerging therapies.

KOL Views

To keep up with current market trends, we take KOLs and SMEs’ opinions working in the domain through primary research to fill the data gaps and validate our secondary research. Industry Experts contacted for insights on Chronic Hepatitis B evolving treatment landscape, patient reliance on conventional therapies, patient’s therapy switching acceptability, and drug uptake along with challenges related to accessibility, include Medical/scientific writers, Medical Oncologists and Professors, Pediatric Gastroenterologist of Rady Children’s Hospital, Hepatitis B Foundation, and Others.

DelveInsight’s analysts connected with 50+ KOLs to gather insights; however, interviews were conducted with 15+ KOLs in the 7MM. Their opinion helps understand and validate current and emerging therapies and treatment patterns or Chronic Hepatitis B market trends. This will support the clients in potential upcoming novel treatments by identifying the overall scenario of the market and the unmet needs.

Qualitative Analysis

We perform Qualitative and market Intelligence analysis using various approaches, such as SWOT analysis and Conjoint Analysis. In the SWOT analysis, strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats in terms of disease diagnosis, patient awareness, patient burden, competitive landscape, cost-effectiveness, and geographical accessibility of therapies are provided. These pointers are based on the Analyst’s discretion and assessment of the patient burden, cost analysis, and existing and evolving treatment landscape.

Conjoint Analysis analyzes multiple approved and emerging therapies based on relevant attributes such as safety, efficacy, frequency of administration, route of administration, and order of entry. Scoring is given based on these parameters to analyze the effectiveness of therapy.

In efficacy, the trial’s primary and secondary outcome measures are evaluated; for instance, in Chronic Hepatitis B trials, one of the most important primary outcome measures is the HBsAg loss confirmed on two occasions at least 6 months apart without the requirement for anti-HBs seroconversion plus undetectable Hepatitis B virus DNA.

Both EMA and the FDA believe the endpoint in Phase II clinical trials should be tailored to the drug in question, and the benefit should outweigh the risk, allowing subsequent drug development. Given that HBsAg loss is the preferred primary endpoint for Phase III clinical trials. Thus, Phase II trials should look for an early signal of finite treatment efficacy. A decrease in HBsAg level to <100 IU/mL was proposed as a clinically meaningful endpoint for Phase II trials, but HBsAg decline must still be sufficiently validated and scientifically justified.

Further, the therapies’ safety is evaluated wherein the acceptability, tolerability, and adverse events are majorly observed. It sets a clear understanding of the side effects posed by the drug in the trials. In addition, the scoring is also based on the route of administration, order of entry and designation, probability of success, and the addressable patient pool for each therapy. According to these parameters, the final weightage score and the ranking of the emerging therapies are decided.

Market Access and Reimbursement

The risk of hepatitis B is low in the UK, and children and adults in high-risk groups are offered the vaccine. All babies in the UK born on or after August 1, 2017, are given three doses of hepatitis B-containing vaccine as part of the NHS routine vaccination schedule. In November 2022, CMS recently released the “National Fee Schedule for Medicare Part B Vaccine Administration” covering the hepatitis B vaccine. Under Section 1861(s) (10) of the Social Security Act (the Act), Part B covers both the vaccine and its administration for Hepatitis B virus (if a doctor of medicine or osteopathy orders it and is available to Medicare patients who are at high or intermediate risk of contracting hepatitis B). In 2022, CMS finalized a payment rate of USD 30 for administering the Hepatitis B virus vaccine.

In September 2018, the independent Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (Germany) considered that no added benefit is seen in VEMLIDY compared to VIREAD in treatment-naïve adults with Chronic Hepatitis B. In March 2020, Haute Autorité de santé (France) considered that the clinical benefit of VIREAD is substantial in the indication extension to treat Chronic Hepatitis B in pediatric patients aged 2 to <12 years with compensated liver disease.

The committee considers that VIREAD (tenofovir), in the same way as BARACLUDE and PEGASYS, provides a minor clinical added value (CAV IV) to treat Chronic Hepatitis B in pediatric patients aged 2 to <12 years with compensated liver disease. The committee issues an unfavorable opinion for inclusion in the hospital and the retail formulary lists of reimbursed proprietary medicinal products approved for use in the indication extension and at the MA dosages to treat Chronic Hepatitis B in pediatric patients aged 2 to <12, with compensated liver disease.

The report further provides detailed insights on the country-wise accessibility and reimbursement scenarios, cost-effectiveness scenario of approved therapies, programs making accessibility easier and out-of-pocket costs more affordable, insights on patients insured under federal or state-government prescription drug programs, etc.

Scope of the Report

The report covers a segment of key events, an executive summary, descriptive overview of Chronic Hepatitis B, explaining its causes, signs and symptoms, pathogenesis, and currently available therapies.

Comprehensive insight into the epidemiology segments and forecasts, the future growth potential of diagnosis rate, disease progression, and treatment guidelines have been provided.

Additionally, an all-inclusive account of the current and emerging therapies and the elaborative profiles of late-stage and prominent therapies will impact the current treatment landscape.

A detailed review of the Chronic Hepatitis B market, historic and forecasted market size, market share by therapies, detailed assumptions, and rationale behind our approach is included in the report, covering the 7MM drug outreach.

The report provides an edge while developing business strategies, by understanding trends, through SWOT analysis and expert insights/KOL views, patient journey, and treatment preferences that help shape and drive the 7MM Chronic Hepatitis B market.

Chronic Hepatitis B Report Insights

Patient Population

Therapeutic Approaches

Chronic Hepatitis B Pipeline Analysis

Chronic Hepatitis B Market Size and Trends

Existing and future Market Opportunity

Chronic Hepatitis B Report Key Strengths

Ten Years Forecast

The 7MM Coverage

Chronic Hepatitis B Epidemiology Segmentation

Key Cross Competition

Attribute analysis

Drugs Uptake and Key Market Forecast Assumptions

Chronic Hepatitis B Report Assessment

Current Treatment Practices

Unmet Needs

Pipeline Product Profiles

Market Attractiveness

Qualitative Analysis (SWOT and Conjoint Analysis)

Key Questions

What was the Chronic Hepatitis B total market size, the market size by therapies, market share (%) distribution in 2019, and how would it all look in 2032? What are the contributing factors for this growth?

How will interferon as a class affect the treatment paradigm in Chronic Hepatitis B?

What kind of uptake, Hepatitis B surface antigen expression inhibitors/Antisense Oligonucleotide, bepirovirsen, is going to witness in Chronic Hepatitis B patients in the coming 10 years?

What will be the impact of VEMLIDY’s expected patent expiry in 2025 (US) and 2026 (EU), respectively?

How will emerging drugs compete with existing therapies such as VEMLIDY, VIREAD, ETV, and others in the market?

What are the pricing variations among different geographies for approved and off-label therapies?

What will be the growth opportunities across the 7MM with respect to the patient population pertaining to Chronic Hepatitis B?

What is the historical and forecasted Chronic Hepatitis B patient pool in the United States, EU4 (Germany, France, Italy, and Spain) and the United Kingdom, and Japan?

Why is the current year diagnosis rate not high?

What are the current treatment guidelines for treating Chronic Hepatitis B in the US and Europe?

How many companies are developing therapies for the treatment of Chronic Hepatitis B?

What are the recent novel therapies, targets, mechanisms of action, and technologies developed to overcome the limitation of existing therapies?

What is the cost burden of approved therapies on the patient?

Patient acceptability in terms of preferred treatment options as per real-world scenarios?

Reasons to buy

The report will help develop business strategies by understanding the latest trends and changing treatment dynamics driving the Chronic Hepatitis B market.

Insights on patient burden/disease prevalence, evolution in diagnosis, and factors contributing to the change in the epidemiology of the disease during the forecast years.

Understand the existing market opportunity in varying geographies and the growth potential over the coming years.

Distribution of historical and current patient share based on real-world prescription data along with reported sales of approved products in the US, EU4 (Germany, France, Italy, and Spain), the United Kingdom, and Japan.

Identifying strong upcoming players in the market will help devise strategies to help get ahead of competitors.

Detailed analysis and ranking of class-wise potential current and emerging therapies under the conjoint analysis section to provide visibility around leading classes.

Highlights of access and reimbursement policies of approved therapies, barriers to accessibility of expensive off-label therapies, and patient assistance programs.

To understand the perspective of Key Opinion Leaders around the accessibility, acceptability, and compliance-related challenges of existing treatment to overcome barriers in the future.

Detailed insights on the unmet need of the existing market so that the upcoming players can strengthen their development and launch strategy


1. Key Insights
2. Report Introduction
3. Hypoparathyroidism Market Overview at a Glance
3.1. Market Share (%) Distribution of Hypoparathyroidism by Therapies in the 7MM in 2019
3.2. Market Share (%) Distribution of Hypoparathyroidism by Therapies in the 7MM in 2032
4. Executive Summary of Hypoparathyroidism
5. Key Events
6. Disease Background and Overview
6.1. Introduction
6.2. Causes of Hypoparathyroidism
6.3. Symptoms of Hypoparathyroidism
6.4. Mechanisms/Pathophysiology of Hypoparathyroidism
6.5. Diagnosis of Hypoparathyroidism
6.5.1. Guidelines for Diagnosis and Evaluation
6.5.2. European Society of Endocrinology Clinical Guideline: Diagnosis of Chronic Hypoparathyroidism in Adults
6.6. Treatment
6.7. Management of Hypoparathyroidism: Summary Statement and Guidelines
6.8. European Society of Endocrinology Clinical Guideline: Treatment of Chronic Hypoparathyroidism in Adults
6.9. The American Association of Endocrine Surgeons Guidelines for Definitive Management of Primary Hyperparathyroidism
6.1. Treatment Algorithm
7. Methodology
8. Epidemiology and Patient Population
8.1. Key Findings
8.2. Epidemiology of Hypoparathyroidism
8.3. Total Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the 7MM
8.4. Total Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the 7MM
8.5. The United States
8.5.1. Total Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the United States
8.5.2. Total Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the United States
8.5.3. Gender-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the United States
8.5.4. Type-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the United States
8.5.5. Age-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the United States
8.5.6. Cause-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in the United States
8.6. EU4 and the UK
8.6.1. Total Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in EU4 and the UK
8.6.2. Total Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in EU4 and the UK
8.6.3. Gender-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in EU4 and the UK
8.6.4. Type-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in EU4 and the UK
8.6.5. Age-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in EU4 and the UK
8.6.6. Cause-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in EU4 and the UK
8.7. Japan
8.7.1. Total Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in Japan
8.7.2. Total Diagnosed Prevalent Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in Japan
8.7.3. Gender-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in Japan
8.7.4. Type-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in Japan
8.7.5. Age-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in Japan
8.7.6. Cause-specific Cases of Hypoparathyroidism in Japan
9. Patient Journey
10. Emerging Therapies
10.1. Key Competitors
10.2. TRANSCON PTH (palopegteriparatide): Ascendis Pharma
10.2.1. Product Description
10.2.2. Other Developmental Activities
10.2.3. Clinical Development
10.2.3. Safety and Efficacy
10.3. Eneboparatide (AZP-3601): Amolyt Pharma
10.3.1. Product Description
10.3.2. Other Developmental Activities
10.3.3. Clinical Development
10.3.1. Safety and Efficacy
10.4. Encaleret (BBP-305/CLTX-305): Bridgebio/Calcilytix Therapeutics
10.4.1. Product Description
10.4.2. Other Developmental Activities
10.4.3. Clinical Development
10.4.4. Safety and Efficacy
11. Discontinued Therapies
11.1. Natpara (parathyroid hormone/rhPTH [1-84]): Shire (Takeda)
11.1.1. Product Description
11.1.2. Regulatory Milestones
11.1.3. Other Developmental Activities
11.1.4. Clinical Development
11.1.5. Safety and Efficacy
12. Hypoparathyroidism - Seven Major Market Analysis
1.1. Key Findings
12.1. Market Outlook
12.2. Conjoint Analysis
12.3. Key Market Forecast Assumptions
12.4. Total Market Size of Hypoparathyroidism in the 7MM in USD Million
12.5. Market Size of Hypoparathyroidism by Therapies in the 7MM
12.6. United States Market Size
12.6.1. Total Market Size of Hypoparathyroidism in the United States
12.6.2. Total Market Size of Hypoparathyroidism by Therapies in the United States
12.7. EU4 and the UK Market Size
12.7.1. Total Market size of Hypoparathyroidism in EU4 and the UK
12.7.2. Total Market Size of Hypoparathyroidism by Therapies in EU4 and the UK
12.8. Japan Market Size
12.8.1. Total Market size of Hypoparathyroidism in Japan
12.8.2. Total Market Size of Hypoparathyroidism by Therapies in Japan
13. Market Access and Reimbursement
13.1. The United States
13.1.1. Centre for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
13.2. EU4 and the UK
13.2.1. Germany
13.2.2. France
13.2.3. Italy
13.2.4. Spain
13.2.5. United Kingdom
13.3. Japan
13.3.1. MHLW
13.4. Reimbursement Scenario and Key HTA Decisions
14. KOL Views
15. Unmet Needs
16. SWOT Analysis
17. Appendix
17.1. Report Methodology
17.2. Bibliography
18. DelveInsight Capabilities
19. Disclaimer
20. About DelveInsight

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