Epiomic Epidemiology Series: Cushing’s syndrome Forecast in 25 Major Markets 2018–2028
Black Swan Analysis Epiomic Epidemiology Forecast Report on Cushing’s Syndrome in 25 Major Markets
Cushing’s syndrome is a multisystem disorder associated with chronic systemic exposure to excessive amounts of cortisol. It can be induced by both endogenous and exogenous factors and usually presents a typical set of signs and symptoms. Multiple comorbidities of Cushing’s syndrome have been identified, which significantly impact the quality of patients’ life and contribute to increased mortality.
Even though various effective treatment methods are available, including surgical, radiation-based and pharmacological interventions, recurrence of the disorder is possible. Patients in whom Cushing’s syndrome occurred during childhood can retain some physical and psychosocial disadvantage in later life.
This report provides the current prevalent population for Cushing’s syndrome across 25 Major Markets (USA, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, UK, Poland, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Bulgaria, Russia, Turkey, South Africa, Japan, China, South Korea, India, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Mexico) split by gender and 5-year age cohort. In addition to the current prevalence, the report provides an overview of the risk factors, diagnosis and prognosis of the disease, along with specific variations by geography and ethnicity.
Providing a value-added level of insight from the analysis team at Black Swan, Cushing’s syndrome patients grouped by classification, treatments and comorbidities have been quantified and presented alongside the overall prevalence figures. These sub-populations within the main disease are also included at a country level across the 10-year forecast snapshot.
Main symptoms and co-morbidities of Cushing’s syndrome include:
Reason to buy
Cushing’s syndrome is a multisystem disorder associated with chronic systemic exposure to excessive amounts of cortisol. It can be induced by both endogenous and exogenous factors and usually presents a typical set of signs and symptoms. Multiple comorbidities of Cushing’s syndrome have been identified, which significantly impact the quality of patients’ life and contribute to increased mortality.
Even though various effective treatment methods are available, including surgical, radiation-based and pharmacological interventions, recurrence of the disorder is possible. Patients in whom Cushing’s syndrome occurred during childhood can retain some physical and psychosocial disadvantage in later life.
This report provides the current prevalent population for Cushing’s syndrome across 25 Major Markets (USA, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, UK, Poland, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Bulgaria, Russia, Turkey, South Africa, Japan, China, South Korea, India, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Mexico) split by gender and 5-year age cohort. In addition to the current prevalence, the report provides an overview of the risk factors, diagnosis and prognosis of the disease, along with specific variations by geography and ethnicity.
Providing a value-added level of insight from the analysis team at Black Swan, Cushing’s syndrome patients grouped by classification, treatments and comorbidities have been quantified and presented alongside the overall prevalence figures. These sub-populations within the main disease are also included at a country level across the 10-year forecast snapshot.
Main symptoms and co-morbidities of Cushing’s syndrome include:
- Obesity
- Insulin resistance
- Hypertension
- Dyslipidaemia
- Hypercoagulability leading to VTE
- Osteopaenia/osteoporosis
- Psychiatric disorders (with aggravation of pre-existing tendencies)
- Impaired growth in children
Reason to buy
- Ability to quantify patient populations in global Cushing’s syndrome market to target the development of future products, pricing strategies and launch plans.
- Further insight into the prevalence of the subdivided types of Cushing’s syndrome and identification of patient segments with high potential.
- Delivery of more accurate information for clinical trials in study sizing and realistic patient recruitment for various countries.
- Better understanding of the impact of specific co-morbid conditions on the prevalent population of Cushing’s syndrome patients.
- Identification of Cushing’s syndrome patient sub-populations that require treatment.
- Better understanding of the specific markets that have the largest number of Cushing’s syndrome patients.
INTRODUCTION
CAUSE OF THE DISEASE
RISK FACTORS & PREVENTION
DIAGNOSIS OF THE DISEASE
VARIATION BY GEOGRAPHY/ETHNICITY
DISEASE PROGNOSIS & CLINICAL COURSE
KEY COMORBID CONDITIONS / FEATURES ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISEASE
METHODOLOGY FOR QUANTIFICATION OF PATIENT NUMBERS
TOP-LINE INCIDENCE FOR CUSHING’S SYNDROME
FEATURES OF CUSHING’S SYNDROME PATIENTS
TREATMENT OF CUSHING’S SYNDROME PATIENTS
SURGICAL TREATMENT
RADIOTHERAPY
PHARMACOLOGIC TREATMENT
COMORBIDITIES OF CUSHING’S SYNDROME PATIENTS
ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE REPORT
OTHER BLACK SWAN SERVICES & SOLUTIONS
REPORTS & PUBLICATIONS
ONLINE EPIDEMIOLOGY DATABASES
ONLINE PHARMACEUTICAL PRICING DATABASE
REFERENCES
APPENDIX
CAUSE OF THE DISEASE
RISK FACTORS & PREVENTION
DIAGNOSIS OF THE DISEASE
VARIATION BY GEOGRAPHY/ETHNICITY
DISEASE PROGNOSIS & CLINICAL COURSE
KEY COMORBID CONDITIONS / FEATURES ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISEASE
METHODOLOGY FOR QUANTIFICATION OF PATIENT NUMBERS
TOP-LINE INCIDENCE FOR CUSHING’S SYNDROME
FEATURES OF CUSHING’S SYNDROME PATIENTS
TREATMENT OF CUSHING’S SYNDROME PATIENTS
SURGICAL TREATMENT
RADIOTHERAPY
PHARMACOLOGIC TREATMENT
COMORBIDITIES OF CUSHING’S SYNDROME PATIENTS
ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE REPORT
OTHER BLACK SWAN SERVICES & SOLUTIONS
REPORTS & PUBLICATIONS
ONLINE EPIDEMIOLOGY DATABASES
ONLINE PHARMACEUTICAL PRICING DATABASE
REFERENCES
APPENDIX
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES
Table 1. Classification of Cushing’s syndrome by ACTH-dependency
Table 2. Mutations found in tumours causing Cushing’s syndrome
Table 3. Incidence of Cushing’s syndrome, total (000s)
Table 4. Incidence of Cushing’s syndrome, males (000s)
Table 5. Incidence of Cushing’s syndrome, females (000s)
Table 6. Patients with Cushing’s syndrome by classification, total (000s)
Table 7. Patients with ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome by cause, total (000s)
Table 8. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing treatment, total (000s)
Table 9. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing surgical treatment, total (000s)
Table 10. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing pituitarectomy, total (000s)
Table 11. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing adrenalectomy, total (000s)
Table 12. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing radiotherapy, total (000s)
Table 13. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing pharmacologic treatment, total (000s)
Table 14. Patients with Cushing's syndrome treated with dopamine agonists, total (000s)
Table 15. Patients with Cushing's syndrome treated with ketoconazole, total (000s)
Table 16. Patients with Cushing's syndrome treated with mitotane, total (000s)
Table 17. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with musculoskeletal complications, total (000s)
Table 18. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with cardiovascular complications, total (000s)
Table 19. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with endocrine/metabolic complications, total (000s)
Table 20. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with mental health complications, total (000s)
Table 21. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with acne, total (000s)
Table 22. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with infections, total (000s)
Table 23. Abbreviations and acronyms used in the report
Table 24. USA incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 25. USA incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 26. Canada incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 27. Canada incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 28. France incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 29. France incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 30. Germany incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 31. Germany incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 32. Italy incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 33. Italy incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 34. Spain incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 35. Spain incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 36. UK incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 37. UK incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 38. Poland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 39. Poland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 40. Netherlands incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 41. Netherlands incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 42. Norway incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 43. Norway incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 44. Sweden incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 45. Sweden incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 46. Denmark incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 47. Denmark incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 48. Finland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 49. Finland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 50. Bulgaria incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 51. Bulgaria incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 52. Russia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 53. Russia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 54. Turkey incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 55. Turkey incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 56. South Africa incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 57. South Africa incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 58. Japan incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 59. Japan incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 60. China incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 61. China incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 62. South Korea incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 63. South Korea incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 64. India incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 65. India incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 66. Australia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 67. Australia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 68. New Zealand incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 69. New Zealand incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 70. Brazil incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 71. Brazil incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 72. Mexico incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 73. Mexico incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 1. Classification of Cushing’s syndrome by ACTH-dependency
Table 2. Mutations found in tumours causing Cushing’s syndrome
Table 3. Incidence of Cushing’s syndrome, total (000s)
Table 4. Incidence of Cushing’s syndrome, males (000s)
Table 5. Incidence of Cushing’s syndrome, females (000s)
Table 6. Patients with Cushing’s syndrome by classification, total (000s)
Table 7. Patients with ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome by cause, total (000s)
Table 8. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing treatment, total (000s)
Table 9. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing surgical treatment, total (000s)
Table 10. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing pituitarectomy, total (000s)
Table 11. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing adrenalectomy, total (000s)
Table 12. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing radiotherapy, total (000s)
Table 13. Patients with Cushing's syndrome undergoing pharmacologic treatment, total (000s)
Table 14. Patients with Cushing's syndrome treated with dopamine agonists, total (000s)
Table 15. Patients with Cushing's syndrome treated with ketoconazole, total (000s)
Table 16. Patients with Cushing's syndrome treated with mitotane, total (000s)
Table 17. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with musculoskeletal complications, total (000s)
Table 18. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with cardiovascular complications, total (000s)
Table 19. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with endocrine/metabolic complications, total (000s)
Table 20. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with mental health complications, total (000s)
Table 21. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with acne, total (000s)
Table 22. ACTH-dependent Cushing's syndrome patients with infections, total (000s)
Table 23. Abbreviations and acronyms used in the report
Table 24. USA incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 25. USA incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 26. Canada incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 27. Canada incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 28. France incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 29. France incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 30. Germany incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 31. Germany incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 32. Italy incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 33. Italy incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 34. Spain incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 35. Spain incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 36. UK incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 37. UK incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 38. Poland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 39. Poland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 40. Netherlands incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 41. Netherlands incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 42. Norway incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 43. Norway incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 44. Sweden incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 45. Sweden incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 46. Denmark incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 47. Denmark incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 48. Finland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 49. Finland incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 50. Bulgaria incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 51. Bulgaria incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 52. Russia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 53. Russia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 54. Turkey incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 55. Turkey incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 56. South Africa incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 57. South Africa incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 58. Japan incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 59. Japan incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 60. China incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 61. China incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 62. South Korea incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 63. South Korea incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 64. India incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 65. India incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 66. Australia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 67. Australia incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 68. New Zealand incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 69. New Zealand incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 70. Brazil incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 71. Brazil incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)
Table 72. Mexico incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, males (000s)
Table 73. Mexico incidence of Cushing’s syndrome by 5-yr age cohort, females (000s)