Neurogenic Orthostatic Hypotension (nOH) – Emerging Therapy, with Unmet Needs and TPP Insights Report – 2025
Neurogenic
Orthostatic Hypotension (nOH) Emerging Therapy and TPP Insights
Thelansis’s “Neurogenic
Orthostatic Hypotension (nOH) Emerging Therapy, with Unmet Needs and TPP
Insights Report – 2025″ provides a comprehensive analysis of the emerging
competitive landscape, unmet needs, target product profiles (TPPs), trial
designs, and KOL insights on key emerging therapies and key drug development
opportunities in the indication.
Neurogenic
Orthostatic Hypotension (nOH) Overview
Neurogenic
orthostatic hypotension (nOH) is a debilitating form of autonomic failure
defined by a sustained drop in blood pressure upon standing (≥20 mmHg systolic
or ≥10 mmHg diastolic) without an adequate compensatory increase in heart rate.
Driven by impaired sympathetic norepinephrine release, it causes severe
cerebral hypoperfusion—manifesting as dizziness, syncope, and classic
“coat-hanger” neck pain—and is strongly associated with synucleinopathies
(e.g., Parkinson’s disease) and autonomic neuropathies. Management requires a
delicate balance to mitigate upright hypotension without worsening concurrent
supine hypertension. The standard of care demands a stepwise approach,
initiating with non-pharmacological volume expansion before escalating to targeted
pharmacotherapies such as fludrocortisone, midodrine, or the synthetic
norepinephrine precursor droxidopa.
Geography
coverage:
G8 (United
States, EU5 [France, Germany, Italy, Spain, U.K.], Japan, and China)
Insights
driven by surveys* with physician / key opinion leaders:
- Survey findings are corroborated and
enriched by insights from interviews with leading KOLs
*Survey is
customized based on client requirements
Deliverables
format:
- PowerPoint presentation
- MS Excel
Key business
questions answered:
- Detailed emerging competitive
landscape
- Pipeline
analysis
- Target patients
for emerging therapies
- Key companies
- Key mechanism of
actions
- Launch date
estimates, etc.
- Clinical trial landscape analysis
- Target patient
segments
- Trial endpoints
- Trial design
- Recruitment
criteria, etc.
- Unmet Needs and Opportunities
- Performance of
key current therapies
- Top areas of
unmet needs
- Opportunity
sizing for key unmet needs
- Target Product Profiles
- Attributes and
levels
- Physician
likelihood of prescribing
- Expected patient
shares
- KOL insights on key emerging
therapies
- Level of
awareness
- Expected use /
line of therapy
- Extent to fulfil
key unmet needs
- KOL quotes
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