PUBLISHER: DelveInsight | PRODUCT CODE: 1605435
PUBLISHER: DelveInsight | PRODUCT CODE: 1605435
DelveInsight's "FcRn inhibitors - Target Population, Competitive Landscape, and Market Forecast - 2034" report delivers an in-depth understanding of the FcRn inhibitor, historical and Competitive Landscape as well as the FcRn inhibitors' market trends in the United States, EU4 (Germany, France, Italy, and Spain) and the United Kingdom, and Japan.
The FcRn inhibitors market report provides current treatment practices, emerging drugs, market share of individual therapies, and current and forecasted 7MM FcRn inhibitor market size from 2020 to 2034. The report also covers current FcRn inhibitor treatment practices/algorithms and unmet medical needs to curate the best opportunities and assess the market's potential.
Study Period: 2020-2034
FcRn Inhibitors Overview
The neonatal fragment crystallizable (Fc) receptor (FcRn) functions as a recycling mechanism to prevent degradation and extend the half-life of IgG and albumin in circulation. FcRn plays a crucial role in the maintenance of IgG levels by salvaging IgG from lysosomal degradation, thereby prolonging its half-life. In non-human primates, anti-FcRn antibodies reduced IgG levels by over 60%, without significant, concomitant changes in the serum content of albumin, IgA, or IgM. FcRn inhibitors are anti-FcRn monoclonal antibodies with high affinity for FcRn at both neutral and acidic pH. Inside the cell, FcRn inhibitors compete with IgG for binding to FcRn. Because of their higher affinity, FcRn inhibitors prevent IgG from binding to FcRn, and IgG is transported to the lysosome and degraded, which leads to a decrease in circulating IgG levels. FcRn: Neonatal Fc receptor; IgG: immunoglobulin G.
FcRn Inhibitors Market Overview
Neonatal Fc receptor-targeted therapies are engineered to selectively target FcRn through various methods, such as Fc fragments or monoclonal anti-FcRn antibodies. These approaches enhance the breakdown of autoantibodies by blocking the immunoglobulin G recycling pathway. This mechanism reduces overall plasma immunoglobulin levels, including the levels of pathogenic autoantibodies, without affecting the other immunoglobulin classes immunoglobulin a, immunoglobulin E, immunoglobulin M, and immunoglobulin D levels. Drugs that inhibit FcRn include efgartigimod, rozanolixizumab, batoclimab, and nipocalimab. These medications can be administered either intravenously or subcutaneously. Numerous clinical trials are currently underway to investigate their effectiveness, safety, and tolerability in various neurological conditions, including myasthenia gravis and other neurological disorders such as chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, myositis, neuromyelitis optica, and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody disease. Positive results from clinical trials of efgartigimod and rozanolixizumab led to their approval for the treatment of generalized myasthenia gravis. Additional clinical trials are still ongoing.
The FcRn inhibitors epidemiology chapter in the report provides historical as well as forecasted epidemiology segmented as total cases of selected indications for FcRn inhibitors, total eligible patient pool of selected indication for FcRn inhibitors, total treated cases in selected indications for FcRn inhibitors in the 7MM covering the United States, EU4 (Germany, France, Italy, and Spain), and the United Kingdom, and Japan from 2020 to 2034.
The drug chapter segment of the FcRn inhibitor reports encloses a detailed analysis of approved FcRn inhibitors late-stage (Phase III and Phase II) FcRn inhibitors. It also helps understand the FcRn inhibitor's 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
VYVGART (Efgartigimod): Argenx
Efgartigimod is designed as a first-in-class investigational antibody fragment to target the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). It is being evaluated for the treatment of patients with severe autoimmune diseases with confirmed presence of pathogenic immunoglobulin G, and IgG autoantibodies, where a severe unmet medical need exists. Efgartigimod's subcutaneous form is coformulated with recombinant human hyaluronidase PH20 (rHuPH20), Halozyme's ENHANZE drug delivery technology, which allows for subcutaneous delivery of biologics that are typically administered via infusion. In December 2021, it was approved by the FDA for Generalised Myasthenia Gravis. It is in the pipeline for various other indications including thyroid eye disease, Myositis, and many more diseases.
RYSTIGGO (rozanolixizumab-noli): UCB Biopharma
It is a high-affinity humanized immunoglobulin G4 monoclonal antibody directed against human neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). It is administered subcutaneously. It received its first approval on 27 June 2023 in the USA for the treatment of generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG) in adults who are anti-acetylcholine receptor (AChR) or anti-muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) antibody positive. Rozanolixizumab is the first agent to be approved in the USA for both anti-AChR and anti-MuSK antibody-positive gMG. A regulatory assessment of rozanolixizumab for the treatment of gMG is currently underway in the EU and Japan. Clinical development is ongoing for the treatment of leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1 autoimmune encephalitis, myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody disease, and severe fibromyalgia syndrome.
Emerging Drugs
Batoclimab: Immunovant
Batoclimab (HBM9161), a fully human anti-FcRn mAb, blocks FcRn-IgG interactions, accelerating the degradation of autoantibodies and leads to the treatment of pathogenic IgG-mediated autoimmune diseases. Phase II study in myasthenia gravis showed that batoclimab can quickly and significantly alleviate patients' symptoms and improve quality of life. Earlier studies demonstrated that batoclimab is well tolerated and can rapidly reduce total IgG in a wide array of pathogenic IgG-mediated autoimmune diseases. It is being developed as a low-volume subcutaneous (SC) injection for the treatment of a variety of IgG-mediated autoimmune disorders, including myasthenia gravis, thyroid eye disease, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIPD), and Graves' disease. It is currently being evaluated for the Phase II trial for myasthenia gravis. Immunovant is conducting its trials in Phase II and III.
Nipocalimab: Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine
Nipocalimab is an investigational, high affinity, fully human, aglycosylated, effectorless, monoclonal antibody that is believed to selectively block the Fc receptor (FcRn) to reduce levels of circulating immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies, including autoantibodies and alloantibodies that underlie multiple conditions. Nipocalimab is being studied in all three segments of autoantibody-driven disease: rare autoantibody diseases (e.g., generalized myasthenia gravis in adults and children, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia, and idiopathic inflammatory myopathies); maternal-fetal diseases mediated by maternal autoantibodies - also known as alloantibodies (e.g., HDFN); and prevalent rheumatologic diseases (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren's syndrome, and systemic lupus erythematosus).1,2-10 Blockade of FcRn by nipocalimab has the potential to reduce overall autoantibody levels while maintaining immune function. FcRn blockade is also believed to prevent the placental transfer of maternal alloantibodies to the fetus.
The market for FcRn inhibitors is expected to grow significantly in the coming years. This is due to the increasing number of patients who are being diagnosed with wAIHA, systemic lupus erythematosus, Graves disease, thyroid eye disease, and many more indications; the growing awareness of FcRn inhibitors, and the increasing number of emerging drugs that are under clinical trials and filed for approval by various companies.
The greater affinity of FcRn has adverse effects on IgG-mediated autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, or pemphigus vulgaris. Targeting FcRn and inhibiting FcRn circulation can improve IgG catabolism, resulting in reduced IgG and pathogenic autoantibody levels, which is anticipated to decrease all autoimmune abnormalities induced by IgG. There are many drugs in the pipeline like Nipocalimab and Batoclimab, that are being developed to target FcRn to cure various indications like Myasthenia gravis, thyroid eye disease, CIPD, and many more. Drugs like VYVGART and RYSTIGGO have received FDA approval for Myasthenia gravis and are in the pipeline for other indications.
Several key players, including ArgenX, UBC Biopharma, Pfizer, and others, are involved in developing drugs for FcRn inhibitors for various indications such as myositis, myasthenia gravis, fibromyalgia, systemic lupus erythematosus, and others. Overall, this is an exciting new class of agents with great potential for development. The maturation of current studies over the next few years will lead to a better understanding of FcRn inhibitors and define their role in the therapy of autoimmune and neurological disorders.
This section focuses on the uptake rate of potential approved and emerging FcRn inhibitors expected to be launched in the market during 2020-2034.
FcRn Inhibitor Pipeline Development Activities
The report provides insights into different therapeutic candidates in Phase III, Phase II, and Phase I. It also analyzes key players involved in developing targeted therapeutics.
The presence of numerous drugs under different stages is expected to generate immense opportunity for FcRn inhibitors market growth over the forecasted period.
Pipeline Development Activities
The report covers information on collaborations, acquisitions and mergers, licensing, and patent details for FcRn inhibitor therapies.
KOL Views
To keep up with current and future market trends, we take Industry Experts' opinions working in the domain through primary research to fill the data gaps and validate our secondary research. Industry experts were contacted for insights on FcRn inhibitors' evolving treatment landscape, patient reliance on conventional therapies, patient therapy switching acceptability, drug uptake, along challenges related to accessibility.
DelveInsight's analysts connected with 20+ KOLs to gather insights; however, interviews were conducted with 10+ KOLs in the 7MM. Centers such as Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center and others.
Their opinion helps understand and validate current and emerging therapy treatment patterns or FcRn inhibitor 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. 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.
Market Access and Reimbursement
Reimbursement may be referred to as the negotiation of a price between a manufacturer and payer that allows the manufacturer access to the market. It is provided to reduce the high costs and make the essential drugs affordable. Health technology assessment (HTA) plays an important role in reimbursement decision-making and recommending the use of a drug. These recommendations vary widely throughout the seven major markets, even for the same drug.
In the US healthcare system, both Public and Private health insurance coverage are included. Also, Medicare and Medicaid are the largest government-funded programs in the US. The major healthcare programs including Medicare, Continuing Medical Education (CME) program, the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and the state and federal health insurance marketplaces are overseen by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Other than these, Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs), and third-party organizations that provide services, and educational programs to aid patients are also present.
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.
Key Updates on FcRn Inhibitor
The abstract list is not exhaustive, will be provided in the final report