While women’s health has slid under the research radar for decades, large biopharma companies and venture capital firms are beginning to take notice of the untapped market potential. More companies are wandering into the space and exploring avenues of science that were largely ignored for years. A BioWorld analysis of biopharma companies working on women’s health solutions found that while many efforts to improve the well-being of women exist, the proportion of funding and partnering for this emerging sector of medicine still represents only a small slice of the industry’s overall activity.
While women make up half the world’s population and own two out of every five businesses, there are substantial knowledge gaps about conditions affecting their health – mostly due to decades of research excluding women from clinical trials and investment decisions.
Eko Health Inc. recently won a category III CPT code for its Sensora platform for cardiovascular disease detection. While a “cat III” CPT code hasn’t traditionally excited industry, the company is convinced that payers will respond because of the massive costs associated with cardiovascular disease.
Clinical updates, including trial initiations, enrollment status and data readouts and publications: Exact Sciences, Harbinger Health, Phenomix Sciences.
Regulatory snapshots, including global submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Icometrix, Theranica.
Med-tech happenings, including deals and partnerships, grants, preclinical data and other news in brief: ATSS, Arsenal Medical, Azenta, Bluejay, Centinel, Corvista, Diagnamed, IMAC, J&J, Pacbio, Responsive Arthroscopy, Vergent Bioscience.
At the BioFuture 2024 conference held in New York in November, Seema Kumar, the CEO of Cure, described women’s health as something that has been directed at the “bikini area.” That “bikini” bias extended to both diseases and their causes – women’s health covered the breasts and reproductive system, and its causes were hormonal. Both concepts are far too narrow.