Hospital-acquired Pneumonia (HAP) – Market Outlook, Epidemiology, Competitive Landscape, and Market Forecast Report – 2022 To 2032
Hospital-acquired Pneumonia (HAP), or Nosocomial pneumonia, is characterized by the onset of pneumonia 48 hours or more after a patient's admission to the hospital without being present upon entry. Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is a specific type of HAP in intensive care units (ICUs) and represents a significant subset. The primary pathogens responsible for HAP and VAP are aerobic gram-negative bacilli (such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter spp, and Acinetobacter spp) and gram-positive cocci (including Staphylococcus aureus, including methicillin-resistant S. aureus, and Streptococcus spp). The specific causative pathogens can vary depending on host factors and the microbial flora present in the hospital setting. Symptoms of HAP and VAP may include cough, expectoration, increased body temperature, chest pain, or difficulty breathing. Clinical signs can include fever, rapid breathing, areas of lung consolidation, or abnormal lung sounds known as crackles. The differential diagnosis for HAP and VAP includes various potential pathogens and conditions, such as Acinetobacter, Adenovirus, bacterial sepsis, burn wound infections, Clostridioides, colitis, croup, Enterobacter infections, Enterococcal infections, and E. coli infections.
·
HAP is
associated with a heightened risk of mortality. Studies have reported all-cause
mortality rates ranging from 20% to 50% for VAP. Factors contributing to
increased mortality include the severity of illness at the time of diagnosis
(e.g., shock, coma, respiratory failure, acute respiratory distress syndrome),
bacteremia, and underlying coexisting medical conditions.
·
HAP
occurs at a frequency of 5 to 10 cases per 1000 hospital admissions and is
considered the most prevalent type of hospital-acquired infection in Europe and
the United States. More than 90% of pneumonia cases in ICUs occur in intubated
patients receiving mechanical ventilation.
Thelansis’s “Hospital-acquired
Pneumonia (HAP) Market Outlook, Epidemiology, Competitive Landscape, and Market
Forecast Report – 2022 To 2032" covers disease overview, epidemiology,
drug utilization, prescription share analysis, competitive landscape, clinical
practice, regulatory landscape, patient share, market uptake, market forecast,
and key market insights under the potential Hospital-acquired Pneumonia (HAP)
treatment modalities options for eight major markets (USA, Germany, France,
Italy, Spain, UK, Japan, and China).
KOLs insights
of Hospital-acquired Pneumonia (HAP) across 8 MM market from the centre of
Excellence/ Public/ Private hospitals participated in the study. Insights
around current treatment landscape, epidemiology, clinical characteristics,
future treatment paradigm, and Unmet needs.
Hospital-acquired Pneumonia (HAP) Market Forecast Patient
Based Forecast Model (MS. Excel Based Automated Dashboard), which Data Inputs
with sourcing, Market Event, and Product Event, Country specific Forecast
Model, Market uptake and patient share uptake, Attribute Analysis, Analog
Analysis, Disease burden, and pricing scenario, Summary, and Insights.
Thelansis Competitive Intelligence (CI) practice
has been established based on a deep understanding of the pharma/biotech
business environment to provide an optimized support system to all levels of
the decision-making process. It enables business leaders in forward-thinking
and proactive decision-making. Thelansis supports scientific and commercial
teams in seamless CI support by creating an AI/ ML-based technology-driven
platform that manages the data flow from primary and secondary sources.
Comments
Post a Comment