Global immunology market size was valued at USD 77365.4 Million in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 143833.2 Million by 2026, exhibiting a CAGR of…

Trusted Business Insights answers what are the scenarios for growth and recovery and whether there will be any lasting structural impact from the unfolding crisis for the Immunology market.

Trusted Business Insights presents an updated and Latest Study on Immunology Market 2019-2029. The report contains market predictions related to market size, revenue, production, CAGR, Consumption, gross margin, price, and other substantial factors. While emphasizing the key driving and restraining forces for this market, the report also offers a complete study of the future trends and developments of the market.The report further elaborates on the micro and macroeconomic aspects including the socio-political landscape that is anticipated to shape the demand of the Immunology market during the forecast period (2019-2029).It also examines the role of the leading market players involved in the industry including their corporate overview, financial summary, and SWOT analysis.

Get Sample Copy of this Report @ Immunology Market Size, Share and Industry Analysis By Drug Class (Monoclonal antibody (mAb), Fusion Proteins, Immunosuppressant, Polyclonal antibody (pAb), Others), By Disease Indication (Rheumatoid Arthritis, Psoriatic Arthritis, Plaque Psoriasis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Prophylaxis of Organ Rejection, Others), By Distribution Channel, and Regional Forecast 2020-2029 (Includes COVID-19 Business Impact)

The global immunology market size was valued at USD 77,365.4 Million in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 143,833.2 Million by 2026, exhibiting a CAGR of 8.1% in the forecast period.

We have updated Immunology Market with respect to COVID-19 Impact.Inquire before buying

Existing market players operating in the global immunology market are focusing on constant innovations and up-gradation of their product portfolio with new and efficient product offerings for better treatment outcomes for the patients. One of the primary reasons for the growth of the global market is the increasing incidence of immunological and autoimmune diseases. Rise in awareness regarding immunological diseases in both developing and developed nations, and the higher prevalence of immunological disorders due to environmental factors, thus propelling the of the global immunology market growth. This, coupled with, increasing investments by major players in research and development activities are also boosting the growth of the market globally.

The change in the immunology market share is also primarily driven by a greater focus towards the R&D initiatives due to recent regulatory approvals, increasing trends of patent expiry and the subsequent emergence of comparatively cheaper biosimilars. Some of the other factors which are also contributing to the growth of the market are the increase in the efficiency of the immunology drugs leading to better patient outcomes and improved quality of life.

The introduction of new and sophisticated targeted therapies such as TREMFYA by Janssen Global Services, LLC (Johnson & Johnson) and Cosentyx by Novartis AG is expected to drive the growth of the immunology market in developed as well as emerging countries, during the forecast period 2019-2026.

Increasing adoption of monoclonal antibody (mAb), combined with the increasing prevalence of immunological diseases is driving the growth of the global market

Increasing adoption and demand for monoclonal antibody (mAb), which is the drug class of a number of immunology drugs and has a number of associated advantages such as its status as a high specific therapy, is one of the most prominent driving factors for the growth of the global immunology industry in 2018. Increasing R&D initiatives in the monoclonal antibody segment and a large number of drugs under the segment is also driving the growth in the monoclonal antibody (mAb) segment.

The immunosuppressant segment is estimated to grow at a faster CAGR during the forecast period. This is attributed to the anticipated increase in the revenue under this drug class, with the interleukin inhibitors becoming more prominent in the immunology market trend. Currently, there is increasing adoption of the immunosuppressants in the markets in the developing nations due to its higher achievement in terms of the efficient treatment leading to improved patient outcomes, and this is expected to contribute to the growth of the market at higher CAGRs during the forecast period.Market Segmentation

Based on the drug class, the global immunology market segments include monoclonal antibody (mAb), fusion proteins, immunosuppressants, polyclonal antibody (pAb), and others. Monoclonal antibody (mAb) segment is estimated to have the largest market share among the drug class types.

The targeted therapy segment accounted for a market share of 64.5% in 2018 and is expected to rise during the forecast period. Based on disease indication, the global market segments include rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, plaque psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, inflammatory bowel disease, prophylaxis of organ rejection, and others. Based on the distribution channel, the global immunology industry segments include hospital pharmacies, retail pharmacies, online pharmacies, and others.

Regional Analysis

Growing Prevalence and Awareness of Autoimmune and Immunological Disorders and Increasing Adoption of Immunology Drugs Expected to Result in The Highest CAGR in the Asia PacificNorth America generated a revenue of US$ 41,622.5 Mn in 2018 and is anticipated to account for a dominant share in the global market during the forecast period. The immunology market growth witnessed in the region is likely to be driven by the increasing adoption of advanced immunology drugs and rising prevalence of autoimmune and immunological disorders.

This is especially applicable in instances where there is a steady escalation of the symptoms and the disease progresses due to lack of efficient treatment. In developed countries, the adoption of advanced immunology drugs such as immunosuppressants is increasing along with the existing drug classes of monoclonal antibody (mAb) and polyclonal antibody (pAb) amongst others.North America Immunology Market, 2018

Europe is estimated to be the second most dominant market after North America due to substantial R&D initiatives and adoption of advanced immunology drugs. Whereas, in emerging countries such as India and China, the rise in awareness of autoimmune and immunological disorders is fueling growth in the immunology market during the forecast period.

In countries like China and India, there is an existing conflict with the high prices attached to some of the immunology drugs. However, in countries like Japan, there is increased adoption and expenditure towards advanced immunology drugs. The Latin America and Middle East & Africa market is also estimated to have future growth potential in global immunology market growth.

Key Market Drivers

AbbVie Inc., Johnson & Johnson, and Roche dominated the global immunology market in 2018 AbbVie Inc., emerged as the leading player with the highest market share in 2018, as the company has the patent rights to HUMIRA (adalimumab), the worlds best-selling drug. The drug accounts for the highest revenue shares in the immunology segment and is approved for a number of disease indications including rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis. In addition, other market players are also getting product approvals such as TREMFYA by Janssen Global Services, LLC (Johnson & Johnson) and Cosentyx by Novartis AG. Other players operating in the Immunology market are Janssen Global Services, LLC (Johnson & Johnson), F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, Amgen Inc., Pfizer Inc., Novartis AG, Astellas, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., UCB SA, and ALLERGAN.

List of Companies Profiled

Report Coverage

The increasing prevalence of a number of autoimmune and immunological disorders in the general population is one of the key factors boosting the global immunology market revenue. The increasing R&D initiatives in the immunology industry and the recent regulatory approvals are also positively contributing to the growth of the market. The introduction of new products in the market, along with an increasing number of patients undergoing treatment for immunological diseases globally is projected to further augment the demand for immunology drugs during the forecast period.

The report provides qualitative and quantitative insights on the immunology industry trends and detailed analysis of immunology market size and growth rate for all possible segments in the market. The market segments include drug class, disease indication, distribution channel, and geography.

On the basis of the drug class, the global market segments include monoclonal antibody (mAb), fusion proteins, immunosuppressants, polyclonal antibody (pAb) and others. On the basis of disease indication, the market is categorized into rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, plaque psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, inflammatory bowel disease, prophylaxis of organ rejection and others. On the basis of the distribution channel, the immunology industry is categorized into hospital pharmacies, retail pharmacies, online pharmacies, and others.Along with this, the report analysis includes market dynamics and competitive landscape. Various key insights provided in the report are the prevalence of autoimmune and immunological disorders by key countries, regulatory scenario by key regions, key industry developments, overview of regulatory scenario by key countries, an overview of current advances in R&D for immunology.

SEGMENTATION

By Drug Class

By Disease Indication

By Distribution Channel

By Geography

Key Industry Developments

In April 2019, Novartis AGs product offering of Cosentyx (secukinumab) for the treatment of moderate to severe psoriasis was approved in China

In April 2019, AbbVie Inc. extended their immunology portfolio with the launch of their new product offering of SKYRIZI (risankizumab-rzaa) for the treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis

In July 2017, Janssen Global Services, LLC (Johnson & Johnson) announced the launch of TREMFYA (guselkumab) for the treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis

Looking for more? Check out our repository for all available reports on Immunology in related sectors.

Quick Read Table of Contents of this Report @ Immunology Market Size, Share and Industry Analysis By Drug Class (Monoclonal antibody (mAb), Fusion Proteins, Immunosuppressant, Polyclonal antibody (pAb), Others), By Disease Indication (Rheumatoid Arthritis, Psoriatic Arthritis, Plaque Psoriasis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Prophylaxis of Organ Rejection, Others), By Distribution Channel, and Regional Forecast 2020-2029 (Includes COVID-19 Business Impact)

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Global immunology market size was valued at USD 77365.4 Million in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 143833.2 Million by 2026, exhibiting a CAGR of...

Global Immunology Drug Market 2020 to Witness Huge Growth by 2026 | Top Key Players; Abbott Laboratories, Active Biotech, Eli Lilly and Company,…

The Global Immunology Drug Size, Status and Forecast 2020-2026 market report covers deep insights into factors such as the COVID-19, which is likely to have an impact on the market. Moreover, it also covers several aspects such as a detailed analysis of the market in the estimated forecast period. In addition, it covers aspects such as the market share and market analysis which is likely to be affected by the global pandemic of COVID-19.

Following Top Key Players are profiled with global positioning:

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The report also highlights several aspects of the segments which are being covered in the market. Some of the segments in the Immunology Drug market consist of Immunology Drug. In the past few months, the demand for these masks has escalated, which can be attributed to the effect of the COVID-19. In addition, there have been several strategies and tools which are being covered in the Immunology Drug Market to determine the effect of the pandemic. Among the several strategies which are being used, some of them are the most widely used strategies such as the SWOT and PESTLE analysis.

Global Immunology Drug Market Segmentation By Type:

Global Immunology Drug Market Segmentation By Applications:

Global Immunology Drug Market Segmentation By Regions:

North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico) South America (Cuba, Brazil, Argentina, and many others.) Europe (Germany, U.K., France, Italy, Russia, Spain, etc.) Asia (China, India, Russia, and many other Asian nations.) Pacific region (Indonesia, Japan, and many other Pacific nations.) Middle East & Africa (Saudi Arabia, South Africa, and many others.)

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These strategies help in the determination and the impact of the COVID-19 on the companies and manufacturers. SWOT analysis is being used for the determination of the various segments of the market. It involves the use of the strengths, weakness, and, threats which are being covered for the market. Moreover, the report also covers the various aspects of the consumers which involve the purchasing patterns, spending patterns, and, geographical patterns. The impact of the pandemic on these aspects has been explained in the report. The Immunology Drug research report also covers and conducts the interviews and analyses the growth of the market for the estimated growth of the market. Moreover, the impact of COVID-19 in the upcoming years has also been covered in the research study.

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As the industry analysts estimates and extracts the data which are affecting the growth of the market which is being affected by the pandemic of COVID-19. In addition, it also covers the demand and supply of the market and the effects and impact of the pandemic in the estimated forecast period. Moreover, increased demand from the consumers in the pandemic also affects the market. The research study has also analyzed several major manufacturers that are present in the Immunology Drug market. It is also used for the determination of the market share and the revenues which are being affected by the global COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, the products and the application which are being used by the consumers are also studied. Moreover, the overall impact of COVID-19 has also been analyzed and estimated, which are some of the major attributes which are covered in the research reports.

Chapters Define in TOC (Table of Content) of the Report:

Chapter 1: Market Overview, Drivers, Restraints and Opportunities, Segmentation overviewChapter 2: Market Competition by ManufacturersChapter 3: Production by RegionsChapter 4: Consumption by RegionsChapter 5: Production, By Types, Revenue and Market share by TypesChapter 6: Consumption, By Applications, Market share (%) and Growth Rate by ApplicationsChapter 7: Complete profiling and analysis of ManufacturersChapter 8: Manufacturing cost analysis, Raw materials analysis, Region-wise manufacturing expenses.Chapter 9: Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream BuyersChapter 10: Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/TradersChapter 11: Market Effect Factors AnalysisChapter 12: Market ForecastChapter 13: Immunology Drug Research Findings and Conclusion, Appendix, methodology and data source.

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Global Immunology Drug Market 2020 to Witness Huge Growth by 2026 | Top Key Players; Abbott Laboratories, Active Biotech, Eli Lilly and Company,...

COVID-19 Data Dives: Preexisting Immunity to SARS-CoV-2 Is a Thing – Medscape

Medscape asked top experts to weigh in on the most pressing scientific questions about COVID-19. Check back frequently for more COVID-19 Data Dives, and visit Medscape's Coronavirus Resource Center for complete coverage.

Adam Kucharski, MMath, PhD

There are now several studies that, taken together, give us a useful indication of the possible role of preexisting immunity (antibodies/T cells, etc.) in SARS-CoV-2 dynamics.

Here are my thoughts, plus some helpful links, on the matter.

First, there are several well-defined outbreaks in which a very large percentage of people had detectable infection (either a positive PCR or detectable antibody levels). There were 103 cases out of 117 people on a fishing boat, 11 out of 13 individuals who attended the same meeting, and 7 out of 8 and then 8 out of 8 of those who ate a meal together.

This would suggest that there is not a substantial percentage of the adult population that cannot get infected if exposed to this novel coronavirus. This conclusion is consistent with other data from healthcare workers and care homes.

If there is enough exposure and you look hard enough, it seems you will find infections.

But just because the majority of people are vulnerable to infection does not mean that there is no immunity at all. In a study of individuals during the previously mentioned outbreak on the fishing boat, a small number (3 out of 120) had neutralizing antibodies, perhaps from earlier SARS-CoV-2 infection. They did not get infected again.

Then there's children. There is evidence that they may be less susceptible to infection. Some younger kids not previously exposed to SARS-CoV-2 also have cross-reactive antibodies, which may help explain the reduced risk.

So far we've been talking about immunity against infection. However, there is also the question of protection against disease. Clearly some people get less severe symptoms, suggesting some role of disease immunity.

There's evidence of some pre-existing T-cell responses in individuals who have not been infected with SARS-CoV-2. For people who have been infected with SARS-CoV-2, T-cell responses can persist after infection.

This would be good news, and consistent with circulating seasonal "common cold" coronaviruses, which can reinfect people but seem to result in milder symptoms on reinfection.

It's important to note that protection from infection affects epidemic dynamics more than protection from disease. In herd immunity calculations, what matters is whether people transmit, not how ill they get (although the two may be correlated). So immunity against disease won't necessarily stop outbreaks.

It's also worth remembering that any preexisting immunity from infection (eg, among children) is already "priced into" the reproduction number; the rapid growth early in the pandemic would have been in spite of any preexisting immunity. So we need to be careful about interpreting how immunity might influence dynamics.

Obviously there's still a lot more we need to learn about SARS-CoV-2 immunity. I will be interested to hear about any other emerging studies that shed light on this issue (or whether immunologists want to flag anything I've missed).

For those of you particularly interested in this issue, I would recommend a useful primer published in The Atlantic written by Ed Yong, a science writer, about why these immunology questions are important and very challenging.

Adam Kucharski is an epidemiologist whose research focuses on the dynamics of infectious diseases, including how social behavior and immunity shape disease transmission, and how knowledge of such processes can enhance control measures. Follow him on Twitter

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COVID-19 Data Dives: Preexisting Immunity to SARS-CoV-2 Is a Thing - Medscape

Asymptomatic COVID-19 Infections And ‘Disease Tolerance’ : Shots – Health News – NPR

'Disease tolerance' is the ability of an individual, due to a genetic predisposition or some aspect of behavior or lifestyle, to thrive despite being infected with an amount of pathogen that sickens others. It might play a role in asymptomatic coronavirus infections. Alexander Spatari/Getty Images hide caption

'Disease tolerance' is the ability of an individual, due to a genetic predisposition or some aspect of behavior or lifestyle, to thrive despite being infected with an amount of pathogen that sickens others. It might play a role in asymptomatic coronavirus infections.

One of the reasons Covid-19 has spread so swiftly around the globe is that for the first days after infection, people feel healthy. Instead of staying home in bed, they may be out and about, unknowingly passing the virus along. But in addition to these pre-symptomatic patients, the relentless silent spread of this pandemic is also facilitated by a more mysterious group of people: the so-called asymptomatics.

According to various estimates, between 20 and 45 percent of the people who get COVID-19 and possibly more, according to a recent study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sail through a coronavirus infection without realizing they ever had it. No fever or chills. No loss of smell or taste. No breathing difficulties. They don't feel a thing.

Asymptomatic cases are not unique to COVID-19. They occur with the regular flu, and probably also featured in the 1918 pandemic, according to epidemiologist Neil Ferguson of Imperial College London. But scientists aren't sure why certain people weather COVID-19 unscathed. "That is a tremendous mystery at this point," says Donald Thea, an infectious disease expert at Boston University's School of Public Health.

The prevailing theory is that their immune systems fight off the virus so efficiently that they never get sick. But some scientists are confident that the immune system's aggressive response, the churning out of antibodies and other molecules to eliminate an infection, is only part of the story.

These experts are learning that the human body may not always wage an all-out war on viruses and other pathogens. It may also be capable of accommodating an infection, sometimes so seamlessly that no symptoms emerge. This phenomenon, known as disease tolerance, is well-known in plants but has only been documented in animals within the last 15 years.

Hints that 'disease tolerance' is at work

Disease tolerance is the ability of an individual, due to a genetic predisposition or some aspect of behavior or lifestyle, to thrive despite being infected with an amount of pathogen that sickens others. Tolerance takes different forms, depending on the infection. For example, when infected with cholera, which causes watery diarrhea that can quickly kill through dehydration, the body might mobilize mechanisms that maintain fluid and electrolyte balance. During other infections, the body might tweak metabolism or activate gut microbes whatever internal adjustment is needed to prevent or repair tissue damage or to make a germ less vicious.

"Why, if they have these abnormalities, are they healthy? Potentially because they have disease tolerance mechanisms engaged. These are the people we need to study."

Janelle Ayres, physiologist, Salk Institute for Biological Studies

Researchers who study these processes rely on invasive experiments that cannot be done in people. Nevertheless, they view asymptomatic infections as evidence that disease tolerance occurs in humans. At least 90 percent of those infected with the tuberculosis bacterium don't get sick. The same is true for many of the 1.5 billion of people globally who live with parasitic worms called helminths in their intestines. "Despite the fact that these worms are very large organisms and they basically migrate through your tissues and cause damage, many people are asymptomatic. They don't even know they're infected," says Irah King, a professor of immunology at McGill University. "And so then the question becomes, what does the body do to tolerate these types of invasive infections?"

While scientists have observed the physiological processes that minimize tissue damage during infections in animals for decades, it's only more recently that they've begun to think about them in terms of disease tolerance. For example, King and colleagues have identified specific immune cells in mice that increase the resilience of blood vessels during a helminth infection, leading to less intestinal bleeding, even when the same number of worms are present.

"This has been demonstrated in plants, bacteria, other mammalian species," King says.

"Why would we think that humans would not have developed these types of mechanisms to promote and maintain our health in the face of infection?" he adds.

Maybe germs aren't the enemy: A more nuanced view

In a recent Frontiers in Immunology editorial, King and his McGill colleague Maziar Divangahi describe their long-term hopes for the field: A deeper understanding of disease tolerance, they write, could lead to "a new golden age of infectious disease research and discovery."

Scientists have traditionally viewed germs as the enemy, an approach that has generated invaluable antibiotics and vaccines. But more recently, researchers have come to understand that the human body is colonized by trillions of microbes that are essential to optimal health, and that the relationship between humans and germs is more nuanced.

Meddlesome viruses and bacteria have been around since life began, so it makes sense that animals evolved ways to manage as well as fight them. Attacking a pathogen can be effective, but it can also backfire. For one thing, infectious agents find ways to evade the immune system. Moreover, the immune response itself, if unchecked, can turn lethal, applying its destructive force to the body's own organs.

"With things like COVID, I think it's going to be very parallel to TB, where you have this Goldilocks situation," says Andrew Olive, an immunologist at Michigan State University, "where you need that perfect amount of inflammation to control the virus and not damage the lungs."

Some of the key disease tolerance mechanisms scientists have identified aim to keep inflammation within that narrow window. For example, immune cells called alveolar macrophages in the lung suppress inflammation once the threat posed by the pathogen diminishes.

Much is still unknown about why there is such a wide range of responses to COVID-19, from asymptomatic to mildly sick to out of commission for weeks at home to full-on organ failure. "It's very, very early days here," says Andrew Read, an infectious disease expert at Pennsylvania State University who helped identify disease tolerance in animals. Read believes disease tolerance may at least partially explain why some infected people have mild symptoms or none at all. This may be because they're better at scavenging toxic byproducts, he says, "or replenishing their lung tissues at faster rates, those sorts of things."

Asymptomatic COVID-19 infections

The mainstream scientific view of asymptomatics is that their immune systems are especially well-tuned. This could explain why children and young adults make up the majority of people without symptoms because the immune system naturally deteriorates with age. It's also possible that the immune systems of asymptomatics have been primed by a previous infection with a milder coronavirus, like those that cause the common cold.

Asymptomatic cases don't get much attention from medical researchers, in part because these people don't go to the doctor and thus are tough to track down. But Janelle Ayres, a physiologist and infectious disease expert at the Salk Institute For Biological Studies who has been a leader in disease tolerance research, studies precisely the mice that don't get sick.

The staple of this research is something called the "lethal dose 50" test, which consists of giving a group of mice enough pathogen to kill half. By comparing the mice that live with those that die, she pinpoints the specific aspects of their physiology that enable them to survive the infection. She has performed this experiment scores of times using a variety of pathogens. The goal is to figure out how to activate health-sustaining responses in all animals.

A hallmark of these experiments and something that surprised her at first is that the half that survive the lethal dose are perky. They are completely unruffled by the same quantity of pathogen that kills their counterparts. "I thought going into this ... that all would get sick, that half would live and half would die, but that isn't what I found," Ayres says. "I found that half got sick and died, and the other half never got sick and lived."

Ayres sees something similar happening in the COVID-19 pandemic. Like her mice, asymptomatic people infected with the novel coronavirus seem to have similar amounts of the virus in their bodies as the people who fall ill, yet for some reason they stay healthy. Studies show that their lungs often display damage on CT scans, yet they are not struggling for breath (though it remains to be seen whether they will fully escape long-term impacts). Moreover, a small recent study suggests that people who are asymptomatic mount a weaker immune response than those who get sick suggesting that mechanisms are at work that have nothing to do with fighting infection.

"Why, if they have these abnormalities, are they healthy?" asks Ayres. "Potentially because they have disease tolerance mechanisms engaged. These are the people we need to study."

The goal of disease tolerance research is to decipher the mechanisms that keep infected people healthy and turn them into therapies that benefit everyone. "You want to have a drought-tolerant plant, for obvious reasons, so why wouldn't we want to have a virus-tolerant person?" Read asks.

A 2018 experiment in Ayres' lab offered proof of concept for that goal. The team gave a diarrhea-causing infection to mice in a lethal dose 50 trial, then compared tissue from the mice that died with those that survived, looking for differences. They discovered that the asymptomatic mice had utilized their iron stores to route extra glucose to the hungry bacteria, and that the pacified germs no longer posed a threat. The team subsequently turned this observation into a treatment. In further experiments, they administered iron supplements to the mice and all the animals survived, even when the pathogen dose was upped a thousandfold.

When the pandemic hit, Ayres was already studying mice with pneumonia and the signature malady of COVID-19, acute respiratory distress syndrome, which can be triggered by various infections. Her lab has identified markers that may inform candidate pathways to target for treatment. The next step is to compare people who progressed to severe stages of COVID-19 with those who are asymptomatic to see whether markers emerge that resemble the ones she's found in mice.

If a medicine is developed, it would work differently from anything that's currently on the market because it would be lung-specific, not disease-specific, and would ease respiratory distress regardless of which pathogen is responsible.

But intriguing as this prospect is, most experts caution that disease tolerance is a new field and tangible benefits are likely many years off. The work involves measuring not only symptoms but the levels of a pathogen in the body, which means killing an animal and searching all of its tissues. "You can't really do controlled biological experiments in humans," Olive says.

In addition, there are countless disease tolerance pathways. "Every time we figure one out, we find we have 10 more things we don't understand," King says. Things will differ with each disease, he adds, "so that becomes a bit overwhelming."

Nevertheless, a growing number of experts agree that disease tolerance research could have profound implications for treating infectious disease in the future. Microbiology and infectious disease research has "all been focused on the pathogen as an invader that has to be eliminated some way," says virologist Jeremy Luban of the University of Massachusetts Medical School. And as Ayres makes clear, he says, "what we really should be thinking about is how do we keep the person from getting sick."

Emily Laber-Warren directs the health and science reporting program at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY.

This story was produced by Undark, a nonprofit, editorially independent digital magazine exploring the intersection of science and society.

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Asymptomatic COVID-19 Infections And 'Disease Tolerance' : Shots - Health News - NPR

Identifying emerging diseases focus of new international collaboration – Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

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School of Medicine to become 1 of 10 sites under new Centers for Research in Emerging Infectious Diseases

Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis is one of 10 sites and a coordinating center forming the Centers for Research in Emerging Infectious Diseases, funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The centers are a coordinated network with collaborators in different regions across the globe where emerging and re-emerging infectious disease outbreaks have proven likely to occur.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis are establishing a new international collaboration that aims to help scientists prepare for the next pandemic and, perhaps, provide insight into the current one.

The School of Medicine is one of 10 sites and a coordinating center forming the Centers for Research in Emerging Infectious Diseases, funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Washington Universitys center will be supported by a five-year, $8.1 million grant.

The Centers for Research in Emerging Infectious Diseases (CREID) is a coordinated network with centers that will each have collaborators in different regions across the globe where emerging and re-emerging infectious disease outbreaks have proven likely to occur. The Washington University-led center includes researchers at La Jolla Institute for Immunology in San Diego and international collaborators in China, Hong Kong, Nepal and Ethiopia. In recent years, these regions have seen the emergence of multiple dangerous viruses, including H5N1 influenza, SARS, MERS and, most recently, SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

We want to be able to respond quickly and effectively to the emergence of a new infectious disease, said David Wang, PhD, principal investigator of the new center at Washington University. If we can understand the source of the infection, how it spreads and how it affects people, we have a better shot at preventing a new infectious disease from becoming a major threat to global public health.

Multidisciplinary teams of investigators will conduct surveillance of potential sources of new diseases and the local populations at risk of infection. The researchers will study transmission, disease progression, and immunologic responses in the host, and will develop diagnostic tests and animal models of the new diseases for improved detection of important emerging pathogens and the methods by which they spread.

Such information could help predict which new infectious diseases are at highest risk of reaching pandemic status and aid in efforts to understand the new disease and prevent its spread.

In addition to Wang, a professor of molecular microbiology, and of pathology & immunology, key researchers at Washington Universitys center include Michael S. Diamond, MD, PhD, the Herbert S. Gasser Professor of Medicine; Jacco Boon, PhD, an associate professor of medicine; and Scott A. Handley, PhD, an associate professor of pathology & immunology.

The international centers will monitor local populations for the most common red flags of an emerging infection: respiratory disease, inflammation of the brain, and unexplained fever. The researchers will study patient samples to look for new viruses or other microbes with the potential to cause disease. At the same time, investigators will survey local livestock, mosquitoes and ticks to help identify the potential origins of viruses that could be infecting people in a particular region.

The Washington University researchers will focus on the molecular biology and genetics of emerging viruses and on developing animal models, such as mice and other rodents, to help study potentially dangerous viruses, understand how they spread and set the stage for developing treatments.

If we find a new virus that we want to prioritize, we will develop diagnostic tests, and tools to study the virus and will begin to develop treatments, such as therapeutic antibodies, Wang said. We could use our animal models to test possible new drugs. We also will fine tune plans so that we are quick to respond to new emerging outbreaks, such as SARS-CoV-2, first reported in Wuhan, China.

Weve prioritized studies of COVID-19 at the university, Wang added. Were sequencing the genomes of SARS-CoV-2 viruses to understand the transmission and evolution of the virus that is circulating in the St. Louis region. Were also trying to understand how the proteins that the virus makes contribute to the severity of the infection.

The new centers are prioritizing the study of families of viruses that have shown the most potential to impact humans, including coronaviruses (SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV), paramyxoviruses (measles and respiratory syncytial virus), flaviviruses (West Nile, Zika and dengue) and alphaviruses (chikungunya virus), among others.

There are clear sets of viral families that we are most concerned about because they have the highest likelihood of causing major disease in humans, Wang said. At the same time, were definitely looking for everything with our surveillance studies. Every viral family has the potential to be highly dangerous. We hope this program will help identify those infectious diseases most likely to cause major problems, so we can take steps to lessen the impact.

For more information, visit: https://creid-network.org

This work is supported by the NIAID of the NIH, grant number U01AI151810.

Washington University School of Medicines 1,500 faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals. The School of Medicine is a leader in medical research, teaching and patient care, ranking among the top 10 medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

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Identifying emerging diseases focus of new international collaboration - Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

Impossible Foods CEO on finding meat’s magical ingredient, pitching VCs and convincing meat-loving chefs to serve a vegan burger – CNBC

In 2011, at the age of 57, Stanford biochemistry professor Pat Brown took a leap faith and quit his job to launch plant-based "meat" company Impossible Foods. He did it because wanted to help solve one of the world's biggest problems before he retired.

"The use of animals as a technology in food production is, by a huge margin, the most destructive technology on earth in the history of our species," Brown tells CNBC Make It.

Today, Impossible Foods, best known for its juicy, meat-tasting vegan burger, is valued at more than $4 billion. Its burgers are served in more than 17,000 restaurants worldwide, including via partnership deals withBurger King, White Castle and Starbucks. It's also sold in8,000 grocery stores,

Here, Brown talks withCNBC Make It about his life before Impossible Foods, his first investor pitch meeting and where he sees the brand going. The interview has been edited together for length and clarity.

CNBC Make It: Today, you are the founder of Impossible Foods. But talk to me about life before Impossible Foods.

Pat Brown: I grew up assuming that I ever did about 50% of my childhood was in the Washington, D.C. suburbs and the other 50% was split in Paris [France] and in Taipei [Taiwan]. And I wasn't a very good student. I was capable, but I had very little interest in school. Fortunately, when it was time for me to go to college [in the 1980s], it was a time when the fraction of people who tried to go to college was a lot lower. So I was able to get into the University of Chicago, which is where I went for undergrad and then I stayed there for my M.D. and Ph.D. [in biochemistry].

I wanted to have more of tangible impact on the world ... so I decided to go into biomedical research. And then I did a pediatrics residency, so I spent three years as a pediatrician in Chicago, at Children's Memorial Hospital. I'd have a 36-hour non-stop day. But I loved it because you felt every moment like you were helping people.

Let's move forward to 2009. You were 57 and a professor at Stanford Medicine, Stanford University's medical school, and you took a sabbatical. How did that lead to the creation of Impossible Foods?

I used the [sabbatical] to try to figure out, what's the most important problem in the world is that I might be able to contribute to solving? The use of animals as a technology in food production is, by a huge margin, the most destructive technology on Earth in the history of our species. And once I realized that, it was a no-brainer.

Relatively quickly it became clear that you are not going to solve the [meat consumption] problem by regulation, education or trying to persuade people. Even most environmentalists that go to climate and environmental conferences are eating steak for dinner. They're not going to stop eating foods that are a big source of pleasure in their daily lives.

So that meant that the only way to solve the problem is to understand what consumers love about these foods and do a better job of delivering it than the current industry does. That means competing in the marketplace and pulling the economic rug out from under that industry. I had to start a company to make those changes and that's why I founded Impossible Foods.

What was your first pitch to get funding for Impossible Foods like?

You can't walk a block in Palo Alto [California, where Stanford is located] without tripping over a venture capitalist. I went to talk to three of the big VC firms but I was naive about what drives venture investors. It's not the same thing that drives me, it turns out.

The message that really snapped them to attention is that the there was, at that time, a $1.5 trillion global market being served by a technology [meat production] that has fundamentally not been improved since prehistoric times. And it's just waiting to be taken down by better technology.

But that was kind of like my last [pitch deck] slide. Now, I am much more upfront about this, saying that is a humongous prize for whoever can develop the technology to replace animals in the food system.

How did you create the Impossible Burger?

The premise was this is a scientific problem. We needed to understand in molecular detail how meat works.

From a nutritional standpoint, the problem was already solved [by plant-based] protein. Just to put it in perspective, the global soybean crop occupies .8% of Earth's land area and produces 150% as much protein as in all the meat consumed globally. And it uses way less fertilizer, pesticides and water than the animal agriculture industry. And it's cheaper by far.

The unsolved problem is deliciousness. So we had to study: What makes meat delicious?

We hired molecular biologists, biochemist, biophysicist and basic scientists because the the problem was not making food. It was understanding how this particular food works to create those emergent properties that people crave. So, they got started working on understanding what makes meat delicious.

And how did you find the magic ingredient, heme?

When you cook meat some kind of magical happens there's an explosion of aroma and it's flavor profile becomes completely different. When you have an explosion of chemical activity like that, to me that suggests that there was a catalyst in there.

What I knew was that heme besides being the molecule that carries oxygen in your blood making it red is one of the best catalysts in nature. And it's staring right at you, because it's responsible for the red or pink color of meat. So, it's just screamingly obvious.

You can basically take vegetable broth but if you throw in heme, it tastes like meat.

When you first introduced Impossible Burger, why did you market it to restaurants as opposed to consumers?

We debuted it with a handful of world renowned, uncompromising chefs, the first of which was Dave Chang, who once made a big splash by banning on principle every vegetarian item from his menu. So this guy is a meat guy to the bone, and the perfect person for us to launch with. Someone like Dave Chang, Traci Des Jardins, Brad Farmer and Chris Cosentino, these very meat-focused chefs, wanted it on their menus. So you would be insane not to take advantage of that.

Where do you see Impossible Foods going?

I think last year we increased our sales by about threefold. This year, it's very likely to be more than twofold. In order to achieve our mission[to eliminate the need to make food from animals], we have to grow on average about twofold every year for the next 15 years.

More than 90% of the people who ever want impossible burger are current meat eaters. We need to convince them to try [Impossible Burger]. Once we do that, I think we're in.

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Impossible Foods CEO on finding meat's magical ingredient, pitching VCs and convincing meat-loving chefs to serve a vegan burger - CNBC

Chitosan Market : Global Industry Analysis By Size, Growth Rate, Share, Covid-19 Impact And Trends With Forecast To 2020 2026 | Leading Players-…

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Two UGA professors named to National Academy of Inventors – WGAU

The National Academy of Inventors has named two University of Georgia faculty members to the 2020 class of NAI Senior Members.

Richard Meagher, Distinguished Research Professor of Genetics, and Ronald Orlando, professor of biochemistry and molecular biology, and chemistry, are the first UGA researchers to receive the senior membership distinction. They join a new class of 38 prolific inventors representing 24 research universities along with government and nonprofit research institutes worldwide.

Meagher has dedicated nearly five decades to performing pioneering research across several diverse biotechnology disciplines, including plant molecular genetics, monoclonal antibody development and epigenetics. His research contributions at UGA have led to 58 invention disclosures, eight issued U.S. patents and one pending U.S. application. Hes also co-founded four biotechnology companies based on these technologies. One company, Abeome, is developing therapeutic antibodies against inflammatory and other diseases. Meagher received the UGA Inventors Award in 2004 and the UGA Entrepreneurs Award in 2017.

Consistent encouragement by my colleagues and the creative environment at UGA have been essential to this recognition by NAI and much of my success as an inventor and entrepreneur, said Meagher.

Orlando joined the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center in 1993 and leads a prominent research group dedicated to glycobiology and biochemistry. He holds two U.S. patents and four pending patent applications and has appeared as an inventor on 17 invention disclosures ranging from software to novel compounds and methods of analysis. Orlando has launched three startup companies based on UGA-licensed technology that have raised more than $7.8 million in funding and launched 57 new products. He serves as CEO of GlycoScientific, an Innovation Gateway resident company developing research tools and potential therapeutic antibodies for cancer, and was the inaugural recipient of the UGA Entrepreneurs Award in 2010.

I am deeply honored to have been elected as a senior member of the National Academy of Inventors, but I am not the only person deserving recognition for this honor, Orlando said. Innovation Gateway provided the guidance and infrastructure I needed to move my research into the marketplace.

Innovation Gateway is a key component of the universitys Innovation District initiative to cultivate a comprehensive innovation ecosystem that supports research commercialization, entrepreneurship, industry engagement and experiential learning.

The NAI Senior Member program recognizes national and international academic inventors who have demonstrated success in developing new technologies that benefit society. Senior members are elected biennially and undergo a rigorous selection process by the NAI Advisory Committee, which is composed of elected NAI members and other professionals considered pioneers in their respective fields.

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‘I’m definitely disappointed:’ incoming freshmen face new set of challenges for the fall | The Retriever – The Retriever

Francesca Burton is doing an individualized study in neuroscience and picking up a second major in biochemistry. Photo courtesy of Francesca Burton.

The freshman experience at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County usually includes the bonfire, Involvement Fest, kickbacks in dorms and D-Hall trips. But for this years class of incoming freshmen, many of whom lost part of high school, everything is different now socially-distanced, hybrid or online.

Roshnee Roberts, a biological sciences major and psychology minor, knew March 13 was going to be her last day of high school. Her track season cut short, her plans to speak at graduation cancelled, senior activities and hanging out with friends suddenly not allowed, and her life radically altered.

This fall, shell be attending UMBC from her home, opting not to live on campus. Unfortunately, I was really hoping [that I would be living] on campus. But you know, the way money is set up [its] not happening, which is totally fine, she said.

She was excited to get a placement in a lab, but shes still not sure if shell be able to even go on campus, Roberts said. Everyone else gets to experience all the fun senior activities and I didnt. Now, Im also missing out on freshman year, which is probably the best year, because youre meeting everyone [for the first time], she said.

It leaves her wondering what the future will look like when shes finally able to be on campus under more typical circumstances. Am I going to feel like a freshman? Because everyone else is going to know the [campus], said Roberts.

Luckily, Roberts was able to earn a full scholarship through the Dawg Days: Jumpstart Scholarship to take online classes this summer. Im taking a summer class right now, completely free of cost, which is very exciting, she said. Im taking Math 105, just to get my math credit out of the way.

Computer engineering major Kwadwo Ansah Baah, who lives in Baltimore, is also taking a math credit to get ahead with the help of the Jumpstart Scholarship, and while its not exactly what he had envisioned for his summer, he really likes his professor and class. We all crack jokes to lighten the mood. Im getting to know other people. The Jumpstart Scholarship community is great. We have game nights and everything too, he said.

His outlook is mostly positive, even faced with the adversity of missing out on some activities, hes choosing to look at the situation realistically. I was looking forward [to campus life], but [its] all right. I really understand the way the world is at this moment, he said.

While taking classes from home, his parents have been supportive throughout, giving him the space he needs to complete his schoolwork uninterrupted. My mom and dad understand that this is very important for me. When Im having classes, theyll text me rather than barge into my room, Ansah Baah said, laughing.

His sense of humor hasnt been diminished by the situation at hand, either. He doesnt plan to let the virtual classes stop him from meeting other people or from making others laugh. I believe I can still have the UMBC experience. I still crack jokes [in Zoom or Google Meet] as if you were in an in-person class. I know this pandemic is not going to go on forever, he said.

For others, the pandemic has made them reevaluate what the future looks like. Sarah Nove, an English major, originally thought she wanted to be a journalist while she was working at her high school paper, but when the pandemic hit and the news became more stressful, she had to start turning it off for her mental health. I will say that COVID definitely impacted my ideas, and what I want to be when I grow up and what Im interested in, she explained. And while she still loves editing, shes not sure that being a full-time journalist is the job for her.

When school went virtual in March, her high school newspaper training was turned upside down. I was in charge of training pretty much everybody with the help of some of the section editors. I felt bad on one hand for not being able to pass along the skills that people passed along to me. It was hard for me to feel like I was letting them down but also knowing I couldnt do anything about it, Nove said.

Though beach week wasnt on the docket for Nove, she had plans with her mom to visit Paris and Austria, something that they had been wanting to do for a long time. And thankfully, were pretty confident that well be able to make it work at some point but going on this trip before you become a college student, and have all the responsibilities of college on your plate, it did suck to miss out on that, she said.

Shes spent the summer taking classes and working as a babysitter, a job she loves. However, when it came to making the decision about living on campus, it was devastating to not feel comfortable enough to live in the dorm. I live in a condo with a single mom and a dog. I love it here and its the perfect amount of space for the two of us and our pup. But I was really looking forward to moving out and my mom was really looking forward to having alone time for once in her life, Nove said. Of course, its been hard on her just as much as its been hard on me, so theres the factor just wanting to be out on my own so badly and not being able to. And then on top of that, Im not a person with a huge circle of friends. I was really looking forward to branching out and meeting other people that shared similar interests and values.

While some are opting to stay at home, others, like Francesca Burton, a neuroscience and biochemistry double major, are living on campus this fall. After her plans to visit Canada with her mom and her plans to go to Florida with friends vanished, Burton spent her summer working at the local Boston Market. She hopes that spending the last few weeks of her high school career online has prepared her for online learning in college.

Im definitely disappointed were not going to have in-person classes because I have found I learn better in an in-person setting. But I think by now, Ive just gotten so used to the fact that we will probably have this weird online semester. Ive kind of processed everything, she said.

When it comes to fall activities, COVID-19 has left her mostly unsure. I saw that there was a cooking club that I was interested in. I was thinking of picking up Ultimate Frisbee just as a thing to try, which I think is going to be impacted, she said. So Im a little sad that I wont get wont get to try that out.

But overall, she still sees the fall in an optimistic light. Maryland has been doing a pretty good job on keeping cases down. We havent had a spike yet. I would say Im optimistic that things will go back to normal, said Burton. I think thats all we can do is be optimistic, and just try to make the most of this. I just hope that despite everything being online, we can still just be normal college kids instead of just kids going through a pandemic.

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