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Genomics Research Market Worth to Exceed $31 Billion by 2027 – Clinical OMICs News

March 10th, 2020 7:47 pm

The field of genomics has made fantastic progress in the fields of biomedical research and clinical development. This is good news for patients and excellent news for investors, as the field of genomics is expected to pay large dividends in finance in the coming decade.

Despite being a relatively new field in the space of biology research, genomics has made massive advances in science and medicine in the past few years. Research into the human genome has led to the development of personalized medicine, changing the clinical landscape for cancer treatment and rare genetic diseases, in particular. The cost associated with mapping one genome has dramatically dropped in a very short space of time, costing millions of dollars and years of effort at the start to now costing in the hundreds of dollars per sequence that is delivered in a matter of days. This has allowed worldwide entry into this space, and an explosion of new discoveries and advances.

The global genomics market size is expected to reach USD 31.1 billion by 2027, registering a CAGR of 7.7% over the forecast period, according to a new report by Grand View Research, Inc. Significant changes in disease management processes along with advancements in genomics and personalized medicine are expected to propel the market.

Grand View Research is a U.S.-based market research and consulting company, providing syndicated as well as customized research reports and consulting services. Headquartered in San Francisco, the companys analysts and consultants report in-depth analysis on 46 industries across 25 major countries worldwide. With the help of an interactive market intelligence platform, Grand View Research helps Fortune 500 companies and renowned academic institutes understand the global and regional business environment.

The report that was recently published makes several suggestions as to what is anticipated to be leading this growth. The consumables and reagents deliverable segment is expected to register the highest growth rate, owing to high costs and volume associated with reagents needed for sequencing. This field is filled by companies that service actual research companies, and oftentimes are the main operating costs of lab testing.

The computational services deliverable segment is also set to expand at a considerable CAGR from 20202027 owing to the increasing demand for computational sequence alignment and analysis among molecular biologists. Interpreting sequencing data is a somewhat complicated process, and software and people capable of interpreting the results are at an ever-increasing demand in this space.

In terms of investment into future research and development for predictive biomarkers targeted toward diagnosis and patient monitoring, substantial investments by biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies have contributed significantly to the revenue generated by the biomarker discovery application segment. Clinical trials using genomics sequencing have oftentimes been wildly successful, driving more and more disease-based research to consider its use for new treatment strategies, as well as a search for biomarkers at a breakneck speed.

The success of use of genomic sequencing is a worldwide affair, and the Asian Pacific region is a potentially lucrative market for genomics, and is anticipated to expand at the highest CAGR of 9.1%. Regionally, genomics is being used everywhere, particularly in North America and Europe, but also in Asia, South America, the Middle East, and Africa.

Key companies in the genomics market tend to be located in the United States or Europe, and the largest players include 23andMe; F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd.; BGI; Myriad Genetics Inc.; Danaher.; Pacific Biosciences; Illumina; Agilent Technologies; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.; Foundation Medicine; Oxford Nanopore Technologies; and Bio-Rad Laboratories.

Of these companies, an increasing pool of market innovators mostly from 23andMe, Oxford Nanopore Technologies, and Veritas Genetics (each having launched breakthrough genomic technologies in recent years) are also contributing toward market development. 23andMe in particular has expertise in developing direct-to-consumer genomic tests targeted toward disease prognosis and has received FDA approval for its commercialization.

MinION, a sequencing device from Oxford Nanopore Technologies, is witnessing significant traction owing to its ability to sequence any fragment length of DNA in real time. In the same field, Veritas Genetics is offering an affordable solution for a complete readout of a genomic sequence. A few years ago, it was only possible to procure this information if ordered by a doctor, but now these tests can be taken by anyone curious about their DNA and costs approximately USD 1,000. Veritas Genetics has also begun the commercialization of this technique for newborns genomic sequencing applications in China.

Genomic sequencing and biomarker identification is hardly the only source of income in the field of genomics. Other deliverables besides products and services include functional genomics in basic laboratory research and aspects of costs associated; the study of epigenetics and computer data analysis associated with large data sets; and genomics end-use, in clinical and research laboratories, academic and government institutes, hospitals and clinics, and of course pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.

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Genomics Research Market Worth to Exceed $31 Billion by 2027 - Clinical OMICs News

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