Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU) – Emerging Therapy, with Unmet Needs and TPP Insights Report – 2025

  • Published Date : May 7, 2025
  • Updated On : December 12, 2025
  • Pages : 56

Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU) Emerging Therapy and TPP Insights

Thelansis’s “Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU) Emerging Therapy, with Unmet Needs and TPP Insights Report – 2025″ provides a comprehensive analysis of the emerging competitive landscape, unmet needs, target product profiles (TPPs), trial designs, and KOL insights on key emerging therapies and key drug development opportunities in the indication.

Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU) Overview

Chronic spontaneous urticaria, also known as chronic idiopathic urticaria, is defined as the presence of wheals, as well as possibly associated angioedema, for six weeks or longer in the absence of known triggering factors. The condition is known to last for a period of time, averaging five years, but can last longer in severe cases, especially if accompanied by angioedema. In addition, a great level of disability, reduced productivity, as well as an increased risk of psychological co-morbidities, is observed in these patients, who are also known to have a worse quality of life compared to the general population. Urticaria is divided into two categories, acute and chronic, based on the presence of symptoms for a period exceeding six weeks; however, CSU is distinguished from other forms by its spontaneous nature and its ability to co-occur with chronic inducible urticaria (CIndU) in an individual patient.

Geography coverage:

G8 (United States, EU5 [France, Germany, Italy, Spain, U.K.], Japan, and China)

Insights driven by surveys* with physician / key opinion leaders:

  • Survey findings are corroborated and enriched by insights from interviews with leading KOLs

*Survey is customized based on client requirements

Deliverables format:

  • PowerPoint presentation
  • MS Excel

Key business questions answered:

  • Detailed emerging competitive landscape
    • Pipeline analysis
    • Target patients for emerging therapies
    • Key companies
    • Key mechanism of actions
    • Launch date estimates, etc.
  • Clinical trial landscape analysis
    • Target patient segments
    • Trial endpoints
    • Trial design
    • Recruitment criteria, etc.
  • Unmet Needs and Opportunities
    • Performance of key current therapies
    • Top areas of unmet needs
    • Opportunity sizing for key unmet needs
  • Target Product Profiles
    • Attributes and levels
    • Physician likelihood of prescribing
    • Expected patient shares
  • KOL insights on key emerging therapies
    • Level of awareness
    • Expected use / line of therapy
    • Extent to fulfil key unmet needs
    • KOL quotes
 

1. Key Findings and Analyst Commentary

  • Key trends: market snapshots, SWOT analysis, commercial benefits and risk,etc.

2. Disease Context

  • Disease definition, classification, etiology and pathophysiology, drug targets,etc.

3. Epidemiology

  • Key takeaways
  • Incidence / Prevalence
  • Diagnosed and Drug-Treated populations
  • Comorbidities
  • Other relevant patient segments

4. Market Size and Forecast

  • Key takeaways
  • Market drivers and constraints
  • Drug-class specific trends
  • Country-specific trends

5. Competitive Landscape

  • Current therapies
    • Key takeaways
    • Dx and Tx journey/algorithm
    • Key current therapies – profiles and KOL insights
  • Emerging therapies
    • Key takeaways
    • Notable late-phase emerging therapies – profiles, launch expectations, KOL insights
    • Notable early-phase pipeline

6. Unmet Need and TPP Analysis

  • Top unmet needs and future attainment by emerging therapies
  • TPP analysis and KOL expectations

7. Regulatory and Reimbursement Environments (by country and payer insights)

8. Appendix (e.g., bibliography, methodology)

Frequently asked questions