How to successfully commercialise microbiome-based diagnostics

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Andrew Thomson, Brian Carpenter and Robert Broadnax from the global consulting firm Charles River Associates (CRA) explore key drivers of adoption of microbiome-based diagnostics, highlight barriers to their use and offer recommendations to overcome specific challenges.

Microbiome-based diagnostics have generated significant interest in recent years partly due to widespread advances in the development of underlying microbiome mapping technologies. These technologies can link the composition of a person’s microbiome – the diverse community of all microorganisms, helpful and harmful, in the human body – to the emergence and progression of specific diseases (e.g., irritable bowel syndrome [IBS], inflammatory bowel disease [IBD], and Celiac disease). Arming physicians and patients with tools to accurately characterise imbalances in bacteria living in the human microbiome (dysbiosis) is essential to identifying and managing diseases as early as possible. 

There is still an unmet need for therapeutics that can restore a harmonious microbial ecosystem (symbiosis) to treat a range of diseases, but several promising therapies are approaching potential FDA approval. Developers of microbiome-based diagnostics must prepare for the emergence of these therapeutics as they will likely accelerate the need for complementary diagnostics. They must understand the impact impending therapeutics will have on the microbiome market and characterise the depth and breadth of the commercial opportunity, especially as advanced underlying technologies allow diagnostics to serve a range of uses across therapeutic areas.

Drivers of adoption

The potential uses of microbiome-based diagnostics range from precise clinical diagnosis of diseases to day-to-day wellness tracking with direct-to-consumer (DTC) tools. The following drivers will be essential in supporting adoption of microbiome-based diagnostics for these and other uses.

Barriers to use

While the interest and need for microbiome-based diagnostics is growing there are some concerns that could hinder their adoption. 

Recommendations for developers

The barriers above highlight the need to communicate the clinical and economic value of microbiome-based diagnostics and elevate their use above DTC health and wellness applications and into the clinic. Diagnostics developers will need to convince stakeholders, ranging from patients to payers, of the value diagnostic tools present in improving patients’ wellbeing and outcomes, through more appropriately targeted microbiome-based therapeutics. A critical element of this perception shift will be linking test results from diagnostics with microbiome-based treatment interventions (once available), providing the opportunity for microbiome-based diagnostics to inform targeted use of therapeutics and strengthen their clinical value. 

This will require diagnostics developers to systematically: 

  1. identify and understand opportunities that present the highest commercial potential for diagnostic technologies; 
  2. develop convincing value propositions that align with unmet needs, can be sufficiently supported by data, and resonate with stakeholders; 
  3. implement a range of market-shaping techniques to build awareness and demand for these diagnostics;
  4. establish compelling positioning versus the competition; 
  5. develop and execute a robust evidence generation strategy outlining how to identify and prioritise data gaps relevant to a diagnostic’s value proposition (e.g., patient outcomes data and health economics data); and 
  6. effectively communicate a product’s value proposition to target customers once all required data are collected through marketing and field efforts.

The views expressed herein are the authors’ and not those of Charles River Associates (CRA) or any of the organisations with which the authors are affiliated.

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