Among Important Factors that Influence Surveyed Specialists’ Treatment Selection Are Bactericidal Activity and High Resistance Barrier to MRSA Infections, According to a New Report from Arlington Medical Resources
June 22, 2010–Malvern, Penn. –Arlington Medical Resources (AMR), a provider of premier market intelligence for the pharmaceutical and diagnostic imaging industries, finds that surveyed infectious disease specialists anticipate changes in their future prescribing patterns for treating hospital-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections. Physicians want to continue gaining experience with currently branded anti-infectives such as Cubist’s Cubicin, Theravance/Astellas’s Vibativ, and Pfizer’s Zyvox and Tygacil. These drugs offer potent MRSA activity but are often placed on restricted formulary limiting their use to confirmed cases and treatment failures.
“Surveyed infectious disease specialists believe that increases in the incidence of MRSA infections and failures with vancomycin (the current standard of care) could be more common in the future, potentially driving physicians to shift prescribing away from vancomycin and toward these branded agents (Cubicin, Vibativ, Zyvox and Tygacil),” said Lisa Arias, analyst.
The new report entitled Hospital Anti-Infectives Insight Series: MRSA Infections also finds that the most important factors that influence physicians’ treatment selection are activity against MRSA, safety and tolerability, bactericidal activity, and a high barrier to resistance. Emerging drugs that can strongly demonstrate these attributes or improve upon them compared with current therapies could be well-received in the MRSA market. In contrast, factors that offer convenience, such as oral formulation and dosing schedule, are not as important to infectious disease specialists when selecting therapy and therefore are not as influential when treating MRSA infections.
About the Report
AMR’s Hospital Anti-Infectives Insight Series: MRSA Infections analyzes hospital antibiotic prescribing patterns using AMR’s comprehensive and highly detailed clinical data in conjunction with primary research and extensive understanding of emerging therapies and forecasts. This report contains U.S. data and examines the reasons behind physicians’ product preferences, factors driving hospital antibiotic prescribing patterns and receptivity to emerging antibiotics.
About AMR
AMR (www.AMR-data.com) serves the market intelligence needs of the pharmaceutical and diagnostic imaging industries. Research includes clinical inpatient databases that directly link anti-infective drug with indication/procedure, formulary and stocking status tracking studies, drug purchasing audits and diagnostic imaging procedure volume/contrast media usage audits. AMR is a Decision Resources, Inc. company.
About Decision Resources, Inc.
Decision Resources, Inc. is a cohesive portfolio of companies that offers best-in-class, high-value information and insights on important sectors of the healthcare industry. Clients rely on this analysis and data to make informed decisions. Please visit Decision Resources, Inc. at www.DecisionResourcesInc.com.
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