Hepatitis B Virus – Epidemiology – Extrapolated Worldwide Coverage
Clarivate’s Extrapolated Worldwide Coverage is the first and only evidence-based data set of epidemiological forecasts for key hepatitis B virus (HBV) patient populations covering 171 countries and more than 99% of the global population, delivered in an interactive dashboard-style download.
Use the Extrapolated Worldwide Coverage dashboard to do the following:
View 10-year forecasts of the first-line drug-treatable population and diagnosed incident cases for all 171 countries, stratified by region and World Bank income status.
Aggregate country-level estimates into region-level estimates, according to user preference or as required by regulators for orphan drug designations.
Visualize global correlations between disease risk or patient population size and key indicators of market opportunity such as GDP per capita and healthcare spend per capita.
Generate and export global heat maps of disease risk or patient population size.
The Extrapolated Worldwide Coverage dashboard is available as an Excel file in the “Downloads” section. It is available for purchase by clients who subscribe to all 45 countries covered by Clarivate Epidemiology. For subscription and entitlement queries, please contact healthcare.support@clarivate.com.
Hepatitis B Virus - Epidemiology - Extrapolated Worldwide Coverage
Extrapolated Worldwide Coverage
Introduction
Download
The Global Extrapolator Model
The Global Extrapolation Algorithm
Bibliography
T.J. Arndt, M.P.H., C.P.H.
Thomas J. Arndt, M.P.H., C.P.H., is a senior epidemiologist at Clarivate. He earned his master’s degree in public health at the University of Florida, where he conducted an internship developing a clinical model for noninvasively screening for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). He also holds a B.S. in microbiology and cell science and a B.A. in Spanish, both from the University of Florida. While studying at the University of Florida, Mr. Arndt worked in two physiology-based research labs focusing on maternal and fetal stresses during pregnancy and parturition.