
Hemophilia A -Pipeline Insight, 2025
Description
DelveInsight’s, “Hemophilia A -Pipeline Insight, 2025,” report provides comprehensive insights about 40+ companies and 40+ pipeline drugs in Hemophilia A pipeline landscape. It covers the pipeline drug profiles, including clinical and nonclinical stage products. It also covers the therapeutics assessment by product type, stage, route of administration, and molecule type. It further highlights the inactive pipeline products in this space.
Geography Covered
Hemophilia A: Overview
Hemophilia A is an inherited bleeding disorder in which the blood does not clot normally. People with hemophilia A will bleed more than normal after an injury, surgery, or dental procedure. This disorder can be severe, moderate, or mild. In severe cases, heavy bleeding occurs after minor injury or even when there is no injury (spontaneous bleeding). Bleeding into the joints, muscles, brain, or organs can cause pain and other serious complications. In milder forms, there is no spontaneous bleeding, and the disorder might only be diagnosed after a surgery or serious injury. Hemophilia A is caused by having low levels of a protein called factor VIII. Factor VIII is needed to form blood clots. The disorder is inherited in an X-linked recessive manner and is caused by changes (mutations) in the F8 gene.
Symptoms
The symptoms of hemophilia A and the age symptoms appear vary depending on the amount of factor VIII a person’s body makes. Infants with the severe form may bleed abnormally from their mouth and develop ‘goose eggs’ on their heads (collections of blood under the scalp). Other symptoms of the severe form include bleeding without any known cause (spontaneous bleeding) into the muscles, joints, and organs. Children with the moderate form may bruise easily and bleed too much after minor injuries, dental work, or surgery. People with the mild form of hemophilia A may not be diagnosed until they bleed more than normal after a major injury or surgery. With the mild form, there are no episodes of spontaneous bleeds.
Diagnosis
The diagnosis of hemophilia A is made through the clinical symptoms and confirmed by laboratory testing. Blood tests are done to measure the time it takes the blood to clot and the amount of clotting factors found in the blood. Genetic testing can also help determine the exact change in the F8 gene and can be helpful for identifying other family members at risk for hemophilia A.
Treatment
There is no cure for hemophilia A, but current treatments can prevent many of the symptoms of hemophilia A. Treatment may include medications and replacing the missing clotting factor (replacement therapy). This type of replacement therapy is done by slowly injecting or dripping concentrated factor VIII into a vein (intravenous infusion). The type and frequency of treatment often depends on the severity of the disorder in each person.
Hemophilia A Emerging Drugs Chapters
This segment of the Hemophilia A report encloses its detailed analysis of various drugs in different stages of clinical development, including phase II, I, preclinical and Discovery. It also helps to understand clinical trial details, expressive pharmacological action, agreements and collaborations, and the latest news and press releases.
Hemophilia A Emerging Drugs
Further product details are provided in the report……..
Hemophilia A: Therapeutic Assessment
This segment of the report provides insights about the different Hemophilia A drugs segregated based on following parameters that define the scope of the report, such as:
Phases
DelveInsight’s report covers around 40+ products under different phases of clinical development like
Hemophilia A: Pipeline Development Activities
The report provides insights into different therapeutic candidates in phase II, I, preclinical and discovery stage. It also analyses Hemophilia A therapeutic drugs key players involved in developing key drugs.
Pipeline Development Activities
The report covers the detailed information of collaborations, acquisition and merger, licensing along with a thorough therapeutic assessment of emerging Hemophilia A drugs.
Report Highlights
Current Treatment Scenario and Emerging Therapies:
Geography Covered
- Global coverage
Hemophilia A: Overview
Hemophilia A is an inherited bleeding disorder in which the blood does not clot normally. People with hemophilia A will bleed more than normal after an injury, surgery, or dental procedure. This disorder can be severe, moderate, or mild. In severe cases, heavy bleeding occurs after minor injury or even when there is no injury (spontaneous bleeding). Bleeding into the joints, muscles, brain, or organs can cause pain and other serious complications. In milder forms, there is no spontaneous bleeding, and the disorder might only be diagnosed after a surgery or serious injury. Hemophilia A is caused by having low levels of a protein called factor VIII. Factor VIII is needed to form blood clots. The disorder is inherited in an X-linked recessive manner and is caused by changes (mutations) in the F8 gene.
Symptoms
The symptoms of hemophilia A and the age symptoms appear vary depending on the amount of factor VIII a person’s body makes. Infants with the severe form may bleed abnormally from their mouth and develop ‘goose eggs’ on their heads (collections of blood under the scalp). Other symptoms of the severe form include bleeding without any known cause (spontaneous bleeding) into the muscles, joints, and organs. Children with the moderate form may bruise easily and bleed too much after minor injuries, dental work, or surgery. People with the mild form of hemophilia A may not be diagnosed until they bleed more than normal after a major injury or surgery. With the mild form, there are no episodes of spontaneous bleeds.
Diagnosis
The diagnosis of hemophilia A is made through the clinical symptoms and confirmed by laboratory testing. Blood tests are done to measure the time it takes the blood to clot and the amount of clotting factors found in the blood. Genetic testing can also help determine the exact change in the F8 gene and can be helpful for identifying other family members at risk for hemophilia A.
Treatment
There is no cure for hemophilia A, but current treatments can prevent many of the symptoms of hemophilia A. Treatment may include medications and replacing the missing clotting factor (replacement therapy). This type of replacement therapy is done by slowly injecting or dripping concentrated factor VIII into a vein (intravenous infusion). The type and frequency of treatment often depends on the severity of the disorder in each person.
Hemophilia A Emerging Drugs Chapters
This segment of the Hemophilia A report encloses its detailed analysis of various drugs in different stages of clinical development, including phase II, I, preclinical and Discovery. It also helps to understand clinical trial details, expressive pharmacological action, agreements and collaborations, and the latest news and press releases.
Hemophilia A Emerging Drugs
- AGN-193408: Allergan
- OCTA101: Octapharma
- Valoctocogene roxaparvovec: BioMarin Pharmaceuticals
Further product details are provided in the report……..
Hemophilia A: Therapeutic Assessment
This segment of the report provides insights about the different Hemophilia A drugs segregated based on following parameters that define the scope of the report, such as:
- Major Players in Hemophilia A
Phases
DelveInsight’s report covers around 40+ products under different phases of clinical development like
- Late-stage products (Phase II and Phase II/III)
- Mid-stage products (Phase II and Phase II/III)
- Early-stage products (Phase I/II and Phase I) along with the details of
- Pre-clinical and Discovery stage candidates
- Discontinued & Inactive candidates
- Route of Administration
- Oral
- Intravenous
- Subcutaneous
- Molecule Type
- Small molecules
- Gene Therapies
- Bispecific antibodies
- Recombinant proteins
- Fusion Proteins
- Coagulants
- Blood coagulation factor replacements
- Product Type
Hemophilia A: Pipeline Development Activities
The report provides insights into different therapeutic candidates in phase II, I, preclinical and discovery stage. It also analyses Hemophilia A therapeutic drugs key players involved in developing key drugs.
Pipeline Development Activities
The report covers the detailed information of collaborations, acquisition and merger, licensing along with a thorough therapeutic assessment of emerging Hemophilia A drugs.
Report Highlights
- The companies and academics are working to assess challenges and seek opportunities that could influence Hemophilia A R&D. The therapies under development are focused on novel approaches to treat/improve Hemophilia A.
- Nicox SA has reached the 50% patient enrollment threshold of its multicenter, United States (U.S.) Phase 2 clinical study evaluating NCX 470 ahead of schedule. Nicox’s lead product candidate, NCX 470, is a novel, second-generation nitric oxide (NO)-donating prostaglandin analog for the lowering of intraocular pressure (IOP) in patients with open-angle glaucoma or ocular hypertension.
- August 2020: Twelve-month randomized trial of 360° and 180° Schlemm’s canal incisions in suture trabeculotomy ab interno for open-angle glaucoma. In this prospective, single-centre, three-arm randomized trial, researchers conducted a 12-month comparison between the different extents and locations of Schlemm’s canal incisions during suture trabeculotomy ab interno for open-angle glaucoma (OAG). In total, 99 eyes of 99 patients were randomly assigned to one of three groups: the 360° incision group (n = 34), the upper-180° incision group (n = 34), and the lower-180° incision group (n = 31).
- Hemophilia A Pipeline Analysis
- Therapeutic Assessment
- Unmet Needs
- Impact of Drugs
- Pipeline Product Profiles
- Therapeutic Assessment
- Pipeline Assessment
- Inactive drugs assessment
- Unmet Needs
Current Treatment Scenario and Emerging Therapies:
- How many companies are developing Hemophilia A drugs?
- How many Hemophilia A drugs are developed by each company?
- How many emerging drugs are in mid-stage, and late-stage of development for the treatment of Hemophilia A?
- What are the key collaborations (Industry–Industry, Industry–Academia), Mergers and acquisitions, licensing activities related to the Hemophilia A therapeutics?
- What are the recent trends, drug types and novel technologies developed to overcome the limitation of existing therapies?
- What are the clinical studies going on for Hemophilia A and their status?
- What are the key designations that have been granted to the emerging drugs?
- Hoffmann-La Roche
- Chugai Pharmaceutical
- Shire
- Pfizer
- BioMarin Pharmaceutical
- Sinocelltech Ltd.
- Bayer
- Ultragenix pharmaceutical
- Spark Therapeutics
- Octapharma
- ApcinteX Ltd.
- Chia Tai Tianqing Pharmaceutical Group Co., Ltd.
- Expression Therapeutics, LLC
- CSL Behring
- BAX 888
- BAY2599023
- SPK-8011
- FEIBA
- BMN 270
- Recombinant Human Coagulation Factor VIII-Fc Fusion Protein for Injection
- Recombinant AAV2/6 Human Factor VIII Gene Therapy
- Fitusiran (SAR439774)
- rVIII-SingleChain
- NNC0365-3769 A (Mim8)
- BIVV001
- PF-06741086
Table of Contents
60 Pages
- Introduction
- Executive Summary
- Hemophilia A: Overview
- Causes
- Mechanism of Action
- Signs and Symptoms
- Diagnosis
- Disease Management
- Pipeline Therapeutics
- Comparative Analysis
- Therapeutic Assessment
- Assessment by Product Type
- Assessment by Stage and Product Type
- Assessment by Route of Administration
- Assessment by Stage and Route of Administration
- Assessment by Molecule Type
- Assessment by Stage and Molecule Type
- Hemophilia A – DelveInsight’s Analytical Perspective
- In-depth Commercial Assessment
- Hemophilia A companies’ collaborations, Licensing, Acquisition -Deal Value Trends
- Hemophilia A Collaboration Deals
- Company-Company Collaborations (Licensing / Partnering) Analysis
- Company-University Collaborations (Licensing / Partnering) Analysis
- Late Stage Products (Pre-registration)
- Comparative Analysis
- Valoctocogene roxaparvovec: BioMarin Pharmaceutical
- Product Description
- Research and Development
- Product Development Activities
- Late Stage Products (Phase III)
- Comparative Analysis
- Giroctocogene fitelparvovec: Pfizer/ Sangamo Therapeutics
- Product Description
- Research and Development
- Product Development Activities
- Mid Stage Products (Phase II)
- Comparative Analysis
- NNC0365-3769 A (Mim8): Novo Nordisk A/S
- Product Description
- Research and Development
- Product Development Activities
- Early Stage Products (Phase I/II)
- Comparative Analysis
- BAX 888: Baxalta / Shire
- Product Description
- Research and Development
- Product Development Activities
- BAY2599023: Bayer / Ultragenix pharmaceutical
- Product Description
- Research and Development
- Product Development Activities
- Drug profiles in the detailed report…..
- Early Stage Products (Phase I)
- Comparative Analysis
- Gene therapy: Expression Therapeutics, LLC
- Product Description
- Research and Development
- Product Development Activities
- Drug profiles in the detailed report…..
- Hemophilia A Key Companies
- Hemophilia A Key Products
- Hemophilia A- Unmet Needs
- Hemophilia A- Market Drivers and Barriers
- Hemophilia A- Future Perspectives and Conclusion
- Hemophilia A Analyst Views
- Hemophilia A Key Companies
- Appendix
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