| 12 Avril 2016
According to the company’s latest report*,  the large population of schizophrenia patients in relation to its small  pipeline of 134 products is indicative of a low level of investment in  Research and Development (R&D), most likely due to a poor  understanding of the underlying disease mechanisms. This acts as a  strong barrier to the development of effective pharmaceutical products. Dominic Trewartha, Managing Analyst for  GBI Research, explains: “While current treatments offer some relief from  symptoms such as hallucinations, they have not proven as effective for  cognitive dysfunction and symptoms such as the inability to feel  pleasure, and there are no disease-modifying drugs currently available. A  number of combinations, such as the addition of adjuvant agents to  antipsychotic medication, have been trialed, but they have had little  impact.” There  are 360 products in the pipeline for conditions associated with  schizophrenia, 60 of which are first-in-class, equating to 21% of  products with a disclosed molecular target. Overall, while the  proportion of first-in-class products is still low, there are more in  the pipeline for schizophrenia-related indications, particularly  depressions and cognitive deficit, than there are for schizophrenia  itself, and these act across a far wider range of molecular targets. Trewartha continues: “The range of  innovation is relatively diverse in the pipelines for schizophrenia and  related indications, with products acting on numerous novel molecular  targets, including D-Amino Acid Oxidase, glutamate carboxypeptidase 2,  and a number of probable G protein-coupled receptors. “It  is likely that small molecules will remain clinically and commercially  the most successful molecule types across many therapy areas and  indications, being particularly relevant in the central nervous system  (CNS) and schizophrenia, with only limited prospects that new product  approvals could change the landscape. “Despite  industry-wide trends towards a diversification in therapeutic molecule  types, it is unlikely that this will be translated in CNS disorders and  schizophrenia, due to the challenges of crossing the blood-brain barrier  with larger and more complex molecular types.”
NEW YORK (GBI Research), 12 April 2016 - Although  the schizophrenia market is replete with unmet needs and its pipeline  is paltry, the overall level of innovation for schizophrenia-related  indications – which comprise depression, panic disorders, obsessive  compulsive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder and cognitive  deficit – is far higher, and has the potential to provide some benefit  to patients with schizophrenia, says business intelligence provider GBI  Research.
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