Myocardial Infarction - Pipeline Insight, 2024

Myocardial Infarction - Pipeline Insight, 2024



DelveInsight’s, “Myocardial Infarction - Pipeline Insight, 2024” report provides comprehensive insights about 48+ companies and 50+ pipeline drugs in Myocardial Infarction pipeline landscape. It covers the pipeline drug profiles, including clinical and nonclinical stage products. It also covers the therapeutics assessment by product type, stage, route of administration, and molecule type. It further highlights the inactive pipeline products in this space.

Geography Covered

Global coverage

Myocardial Infarction: Understanding

Myocardial Infarction: Overview

Myocardial infarction (MI) refers to ischemic necrosis of myocardial tissue. The most common underlying cause is coronary artery disease. Type 1 MI occurs when an unstable plaque ruptures, leading to the occlusion of a coronary artery. Type 2 MI occurs when there is a mismatch between oxygen supply and demand (e.g., systemic hypotension, vasospasm). MI manifests clinically with acute coronary syndrome (ACS), a potentially lethal condition.

From a pathologic perspective, MI is defined as cardiomyocyte death caused by an ischemic insult. Application of this definition in the clinical context is challenging because the diagnosis of MI is dependent on the sensitivity and specificity of the clinical criteria, electrocardiographic findings, imaging studies, and biomarkers used to detect the death of cardiomyocytes. In recent years, the development of highly sensitive biomarkers (such as cardiac troponins) has significantly enhanced the clinician’s ability to see cardiomyocyte death. It should be emphasized that, although sudden elevations in circulating troponin levels reflect myocardial injury, they are not specific markers of ischemic cardiomyocyte death but in some cases may reflect increased cell wall permeability or release of proteolytic troponin degradation products. Besides, the slow average turnover of cardiomyocytes may be responsible for modest persistent elevations of troponin levels in specific normal individuals. Moreover, histological evidence of cardiomyocyte death may be present in the absence of ischemia. For example, in animal models, cryoinjury results in sudden and extensive cardiomyocyte necrosis caused by ischemia. In human patients, chronic heart failure, renal failure, myocarditis, and other conditions may cause the nonischemic death of a significant number of cardiomyocytes.

MI is a consequence of an imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. As plaques accumulate gradually, a severe atherosclerotic disease resulting in ≥75% luminal narrowing does not cause a reduction in blood flow at rest. However, when myocardial demand is increased (due to exercise, tachyarrhythmia, etc.), the flow restriction precludes an increase in oxygen supply, resulting in ischemia and causing angina pectoris. In the vast majority of cases, MI results from coronary atherosclerotic disease complicated by superimposed thrombosis. Plaque rupture is the most frequent cause of thrombosis, as a gap in the fibrous cap of a vulnerable plaque exposes the necrotic core to the blood and elicits a potent thrombogenic response. Although most patients with MI have significant obstructive coronary disease, occasionally plaque rupture and ulceration can occur in the absence of an angiographically obstructive lesion. In addition, a wide range of rare conditions may result in occlusion or severe narrowing of the coronary vessels causing nonatherosclerotic MI. Coronary embolism due to endocarditis, prosthetic valve thrombosis, coronary artery dissection, and arthritis due to autoimmune or infectious causes are well-recognized causes of MI in the absence of atherosclerotic disease. Pathophysiologic conditions that contribute to the imbalance between supply and demand participate in the pathogenesis of MI often. Coronary vasospasm and endothelial dysfunction may significantly reduce myocardial blood supply in the presence or absence of an obstructive lesion; severe anemia may reduce oxygen delivery to the myocardium. On the other hand, conditions associated with increased myocardial oxygen demand (such as thyrotoxicosis, aortic stenosis, or cocaine abuse) may precipitate infarction despite a relatively modest reduction in supply.

Diagnosis is based on typical clinical features, ECG findings, and elevation of cardiac biomarkers. Definitive diagnosis requires cardiac catheterization, which serves both diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. All patients suspected of having ACS should be considered for emergency revascularization; additional aspects of treatment include anticoagulation, antiplatelet therapy, statin therapy, and other adjunctive measures. Secondary prevention consists of dual antiplatelet therapy, the initiation of beta-blocker and/or ACE inhibitors, statin therapy, and addressing any modifiable risk factors.

""Myocardial Infarction - Pipeline Insight, 2024"" report by DelveInsight outlays comprehensive insights of present scenario and growth prospects across the indication. A detailed picture of the Myocardial Infarction pipeline landscape is provided which includes the disease overview and Myocardial Infarction treatment guidelines. The assessment part of the report embraces, in depth Myocardial Infarction commercial assessment and clinical assessment of the pipeline products under development. In the report, detailed description of the drug is given which includes mechanism of action of the drug, clinical studies, NDA approvals (if any), and product development activities comprising the technology, Myocardial Infarction collaborations, licensing, mergers and acquisition, funding, designations and other product related details.

Report Highlights

The companies and academics are working to assess challenges and seek opportunities that could influence Myocardial Infarction R&D. The therapies under development are focused on novel approaches to treat/improve Myocardial Infarction.

Myocardial Infarction Emerging Drugs Chapters

This segment of the Myocardial Infarction report encloses its detailed analysis of various drugs in different stages of clinical development, including phase III, II/III, II, I, preclinical and discovery. It also helps to understand clinical trial details, expressive pharmacological action, agreements and collaborations, and the latest news and press releases.

Myocardial Infarction Emerging Drugs

FARXIGA: AstraZeneca

FARXIGA (known as FORXIGA outside the US) (dapagliflozin) is a first-in-class, oral, once-daily SGLT2 inhibitor. Research has shown FARXIGA’s efficacy in preventing and delaying cardiorenal disease while protecting the organs – important findings given the underlying links between the heart, kidneys, and pancreas. The drug is currently being evaluated under Phase III clinical trial for the treatment of patients with Myocardial Infarction.

KAND567: Kancera

The drug candidate KAND567, developed by Kancera, inhibits the chemokine CXCL13 and protects the heart and blood vessels from injuries associated with AMI. The drug is currently being evaluated under Phase II clinical trial for the treatment of patients with Myocardial Infarction.

TWB201: Taiwan Bio Therapeutics

TWB201, is an investigational non-modified mesenchymal stem cell therapy developed by Taiwan Bio Therapeutics. The drug is currently being evaluated under Phase I clinical trial for the treatment of patients with Myocardial Infarction.

Further product details are provided in the report……..

Myocardial Infarction: Therapeutic Assessment

This segment of the report provides insights about the different Myocardial Infarction drugs segregated based on following parameters that define the scope of the report, such as:

MajorPlayers in Myocardial Infarction

There are approx. 48+ key companies which are developing the therapies for Myocardial Infarction. The companies which have their Myocardial Infarction drug candidates in the most advanced stage, i.e. Phase III include, AstraZeneca.

Phases

DelveInsight’s report covers around 50+ products under different phases of clinical development like

Late stage products (Phase III)

Mid-stage products (Phase II)

Early-stage product (Phase I) along with the details of

Pre-clinical and Discovery stage candidates

Discontinued & Inactive candidates

Route of Administration

Myocardial Infarction pipeline report provides the therapeutic assessment of the pipeline drugs by the Route of Administration. Products have been categorized under various ROAs such as

Intravenous

Subcutaneous

Oral

Intramuscular

Molecule Type

Products have been categorized under various Molecule types such as

Monoclonal antibody

Small molecule

Peptide

Product Type

Drugs have been categorized under various product types like Mono, Combination and Mono/Combination.

Myocardial Infarction: Pipeline Development Activities

The report provides insights into different therapeutic candidates in phase II, I, preclinical and discovery stage. It also analyses Myocardial Infarction therapeutic drugs key players involved in developing key drugs.

Pipeline Development Activities

The report covers the detailed information of collaborations, acquisition and merger, licensing along with a thorough therapeutic assessment of emerging Myocardial Infarction drugs.

Myocardial Infarction Report Insights

Myocardial Infarction Pipeline Analysis

Therapeutic Assessment

Unmet Needs

Impact of Drugs

Myocardial Infarction Report Assessment

Pipeline Product Profiles

Therapeutic Assessment

Pipeline Assessment

Inactive drugs assessment

Unmet Needs

Key Questions

Current Treatment Scenario and Emerging Therapies:

How many companies are developing Myocardial Infarction drugs?

How many Myocardial Infarction drugs are developed by each company?

How many emerging drugs are in mid-stage, and late-stage of development for the treatment of Myocardial Infarction?

What are the key collaborations (Industry–Industry, Industry–Academia), Mergers and acquisitions, licensing activities related to the Myocardial Infarction therapeutics?

What are the recent trends, drug types and novel technologies developed to overcome the limitation of existing therapies?

What are the clinical studies going on for Myocardial Infarction and their status?

What are the key designations that have been granted to the emerging drugs?

Key Players

AstraZeneca

Kancera

Taiwan Bio Therapeutics

Translational Sciences

RION

Mesoblast

Faraday Pharmaceuticals

Idorsia Pharmaceuticals

Celecor Therapeutics

ResoTher Pharma

BioCardia

TRPHARM

Key Products

FARXIGA

KAND567

TWB201

TS 23

Purified exosome product

MPC-25-IC

FDY-5301

Selatogrel

Zalunfiban

RTP 026

CardiALLO cell therapy

Goflikicept

Please Note: It will take 5-6 business days to complete the report upon order confirmation.


Introduction
Executive Summary
Myocardial Infarction: Overview
Causes
Etiology
Signs and Symptoms
Disease Treatment/Management
Pipeline Therapeutics
Comparative Analysis
Therapeutic Assessment
Assessment by Product Type
Assessment by Stage and Product Type
Assessment by Route of Administration
Assessment by Stage and Route of Administration
Assessment by Molecule Type
Assessment by Stage and Molecule Type
Myocardial Infarction– DelveInsight’s Analytical Perspective
Late Stage Products (Phase III)
Comparative Analysis
FARXIGA: AstraZeneca
Product Description
Research and Development
Product Development Activities
Drug profiles in the detailed report…..
Mid Stage Products (Phase II)
Comparative Analysis
KAND567: Kancera
Product Description
Research and Development
Product Development Activities
Drug profiles in the detailed report…..
Early Stage Products (Phase I)
Comparative Analysis
TWB201: Taiwan Bio Therapeutics
Product Description
Research and Development
Product Development Activities
Drug profiles in the detailed report…..
Preclinical and Discovery Stage Products
Comparative Analysis
Drug name: Company name
Product Description
Research and Development
Product Development Activities
Drug profiles in the detailed report…..
Inactive Products
Comparative Analysis
Myocardial Infarction Key Companies
Myocardial Infarction Key Products
Myocardial Infarction- Unmet Needs
Myocardial Infarction- Market Drivers and Barriers
Myocardial Infarction- Future Perspectives and Conclusion
Myocardial Infarction Analyst Views
Myocardial Infarction Key Companies
Appendix

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