PUBLISHER: IMARC | PRODUCT CODE: 1701961
PUBLISHER: IMARC | PRODUCT CODE: 1701961
The global plasma fractionation market size reached USD 26.4 Billion in 2024. Looking forward, the market is expected to reach USD 41.4 Billion by 2033, exhibiting a growth rate (CAGR) of 4.86% during 2025-2033. The rising prevalence of chronic diseases, technological advancements, and the increasing investment in healthcare are some of the major factors driving the market growth.
Plasma fractionation refers to the downstream processing of donated plasma into life-saving therapies and medicinal products. It breaks plasma into individual proteins or plasma fractions using mechanical separation methods, such as centrifugation, depth filtration, precipitation, and chromatography. Nowadays, several modern fractionation processes use alcohol concentrations, time, temperature, and pH to extract specific therapeutic proteins. Moreover, increasing technology complexity over the years and the introduction of in-process viral reduction treatments have resulted in the development of new protein therapeutics and improvement in product purity and quality.
Protein products fractionated from human plasma are an essential class of therapeutics widely used to prevent, manage, and treat life-threatening conditions, such as infections, congenital deficiencies, rare blood disorders, immunologic disorders, and autoimmune disorders. A significant rise in the prevalence of these conditions among a significant part of the population globally represents one of the key factors impelling the market growth. In addition, manufacturers are developing plasma fractionation with additional safety features due to the implementation of stringent regulations and standard controls and settings by governing agencies of numerous countries on quality assurance of biological products. Apart from this, market players are financing research and development (R&D) activities to launch advancement in plasma production technology to improve product efficacy and enhance recovery of immunoglobulin G (IgG) to isolate new plasma proteins. Furthermore, they are focusing on developing affordable viral inactivation and processing technologies that allow utilization of local plasma resources safely. This, in confluence with the escalating need to improve yield, maintain process economics, and manage increasing regulatory requirements, is anticipated to provide a favorable market outlook in the coming years.
The competitive landscape of the industry has also been examined along with the profiles of the key players being ADMA Biologics, Bio Products Laboratory Ltd., Boccard, Grifols, S.A., Hemarus Therapeutics Limited, Intas Pharmaceuticals Limited, LFB S.A., Merck Group, Octapharma AG, PlasmaGen BioSciences Pvt. Ltd., SK Plasma Co. Ltd. and Virchow Biotech Private Limited.