(Albany, US) DelveInsight’s “Hyperuricemia – Market Insights, Epidemiology, and Market Forecast-2032” report delivers an in-depth understanding of the Hyperuricemia, historical and forecasted epidemiology as well as the Hyperuricemia market trends in the United States, EU5 (Germany, Spain, Italy, France, and United Kingdom) and Japan.
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Some facts of the Hyperuricemia Market Report are:
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Scope of the Hyperuricemia Market Report
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Hyperuricemia Overview:
Hyperuricemia occurs when there’s too much uric acid in your blood. High uric acid levels can lead to several diseases, including a painful type of arthritis called gout. Elevated uric acid levels are also associated with health conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, and kidney disease.
Uric acid is formed when purines break down in your body. Purines are chemicals found in certain foods. This typically includes:
Normally, your body rids itself of uric acid when you urinate. Hyperuricemia occurs when your body either makes too much uric acid or is unable to excrete enough of it. It usually happens because your kidneys aren’t eliminating it quickly enough.
Excess uric acid levels in your blood can lead to the formation of crystals. Although these can form anywhere in the body, they tend to form in and around your joints and in your kidneys. Your body’s defensive white blood cells may attack the crystals, causing inflammation and pain.
Rates of hyperuricemia have risen sharply since 1960.
Hyperuricemia Treatment Market
Therapeutic strategies used to treat hyperuricemia are often focused on limiting acute episodes characterized by an inflammatory response of cells triggered by urate crystal deposition. These events are counteracted using NSAIDs, colchicine, or glucocorticoids which act through different mechanisms. NSAIDs‘ effect is due to the inhibition of prostaglandin generation by up-regulated COX-2, recognized as the most important event in the stimulation of inflammatory responses which characterize gouty arthritis attacks. Further, in vitro studies have shown that high concentrations of colchicine suppress inflammation by blocking IL-1 beta processing in monocytes stimulated by monosodium urate (MSU).
Moreover, it downregulates tyrosine kinases and phospholipases in neutrophils, inhibiting chemotaxis, superoxide anion production, adhesion to cellular substrata, and mobilization and release of lysosomal enzymes during phagocytosis. Currently, the drugs of first choice for long-term management of hyperuricemia are XO inhibitors with uricostatic features (eg, allopurinol, oxypurinol, febuxostat), which lower serum uric acid (SUA) levels through competitive inhibition of XO. Following oral administration, allopurinol is rapidly absorbed in the upper gastrointestinal tract, reaching peak plasma concentrations in approximately 30 minutes, and it has a plasma half-life of 2–3 hours. The main active metabolite of allopurinol is oxypurinol, excreted and partly reabsorbed in the kidneys; it has the same mechanism of action, a longer plasma half-life of 14–30 hours, but lower oral bioavailability than its precursor.
Febuxostat is a new non purine, selective inhibitor of XO, that blocks the active pterin–molybdenum center of the enzyme complex, and unlike allo/oxypurinol, does not determine enzyme turnover, avoiding the consequent undesired production of ROS. Following oral administration, it is completely absorbed in the upper gastrointestinal tract, reaching peak plasma concentrations in approximately 1 hour, with a plasma half-life of 1.5–16 hours It is metabolized and excreted predominantly through hepatic conjugation processes. The standard dosage of febuxostat is 80–120 mg/day, even though remarkable decreases in SUA levels have been observed with a lower dose of 40 mg/day. Takeda’s ULORIC (febuxostat), is a xanthine oxidase (XO) inhibitor indicated for the chronic management of hyperuricemia in adult patients with gout who have an inadequate response to a maximally titrated dose of allopurinol, who are intolerant to allopurinol, or for whom treatment with allopurinol is not advisable.
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The major players covered in the hyperuricemia drugs market are:
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Table of Contents:
1. Key Insights
2. Executive Summary of Hyperuricemia
3. Competitive Intelligence Analysis for Hyperuricemia
4. Hyperuricemia: Market Overview at a Glance
5. Hyperuricemia: Disease Background and Overview
6. Patient Journey
7. Hyperuricemia Epidemiology and Patient Population
8. Treatment Algorithm, Current Treatment, and Medical Practices
9. Unmet Needs
10. Key Endpoints of Hyperuricemia Treatment
11. Marketed Products
12. Emerging Therapies
13. Hyperuricemia: Seven Major Market Analysis
14. Attribute analysis
15. 7MM: Market Outlook
16. Access and Reimbursement Overview of Hyperuricemia
17. KOL Views
18. Market Drivers
19. Market Barriers
20. Appendix
21. DelveInsight Capabilities
22. Disclaimer
23. About DelveInsight
About DelveInsight
DelveInsight is a leading Business Consultant and Market Research firm focused exclusively on life sciences. It supports Pharma companies by providing comprehensive end-to-end solutions to improve their performance. It also offers Healthcare Consulting Services, which benefits in market analysis to accelerate business growth and overcome challenges with a practical approach.
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