|
시장보고서
상품코드
2014824
복강내 감염증 시장 : 항생제 유형, 감염증 유형, 병원체 유형, 최종 사용자별 - 세계 예측(2026-2032년)Intra-abdominal Infections Market by Antibiotic Class, Infection Type, Pathogen Type, End User - Global Forecast 2026-2032 |
||||||
360iResearch
복강내 감염증 시장은 2025년에 266억 6,000만 달러로 평가되었습니다. 2026년에는 289억 3,000만 달러로 성장하고 CAGR 9.30%를 나타내, 2032년까지 497억 달러에 이를 것으로 예측됩니다.
| 주요 시장 통계 | |
|---|---|
| 기준 연도(2025년) | 266억 6,000만 달러 |
| 추정 연도(2026년) | 289억 3,000만 달러 |
| 예측 연도(2032년) | 497억 달러 |
| CAGR(%) | 9.30% |
복강내 감염증은 단순한 국소 염증부터 복잡하고 생명을 위협하는 다균성 패혈증에 이르기까지 다양한 병태를 포함하는 그룹입니다. 임상의는 감염원, 숙주 인자, 미생물학적 특성에 따라 달라지는 병원 내 감염과 병원 내 감염이 혼합된 사례에 직면하고 있습니다. 결과적으로, 조기 발견과 신속한 감염원 제어가 효과적인 관리의 핵심이 되는 한편, 항균제 선택에 있어서는 경험적 치료의 광범위함과 배양 및 감수성 데이터에 기반한 치료의 단계적 축소와 균형을 이루어야 합니다.
진단의 복잡성은 임상 증상의 중복, 배양 양성률의 변동, 그리고 계속 변화하는 내성 패턴에 기인합니다. 영상진단, 수술적 평가, 복강 내 배양은 매우 중요하지만, 각각 치료시기에 영향을 미치는 한계가 있습니다. 동시에 주요 병원균의 항균제 내성으로 인해 경험적 치료 알고리즘이 변화하고 있으며, 중증 환자의 경우 더 높은 수준의 약물 및 병용 요법에 대한 의존도가 높아지고 있습니다. 이러한 변화는 치료 옵션을 유지하고 결과를 최적화하기 위해 항균제의 적절한 사용, 다직종 협력 치료 경로, 그리고 견고한 병원 내 감시의 필요성을 더욱 증가시키고 있습니다.
따라서 임상, 운영 및 상업 분야의 이해관계자들은 신속한 진단, 청지기 정신의 통합, 공급망 연속성을 포함한 우선순위에 대해 합의해야 합니다. 치료 결정에 영향을 미치는 임상적 미묘한 차이와 시스템적 압력을 이해함으로써 리더는 이환율을 낮추고, 입원 기간을 단축하며, 불필요한 광범위 항생제 노출로 인한 부작용을 제한하는 개입을 더 잘 설계할 수 있게 됩니다.
복강내 감염증 관리 환경은 항균제 내성, 기술 발전, 의료 서비스 제공 모델의 변화로 인해 급격하고 중요한 변화를 겪고 있습니다. 내성균의 추세는 경험적 처방 패턴을 재구성하고 있으며, 다제내성 그람음성균에 대해 여전히 활성을 유지하는 약물의 임상적, 경제적 가치를 높이고 있습니다. 동시에, 신속 진단 및 분자 병원체 검출의 혁신으로 인해, 진료 후 표적 치료 시작까지 걸리는 시간이 단축되고, 적절한 경우 더 빠른 치료 단계 축소 및 광범위 항생제에 대한 불필요한 노출을 줄일 수 있게 되었습니다.
무역과 관세를 둘러싼 정책 환경은 복강내 감염증 치료에 필수적인 항균제, 제조용 원료 및 의료용품의 비용 구조와 가용성에 중대한 영향을 미칠 수 있습니다. 수입 관세 및 무역 장벽의 변화는 유효성분 및 제제의 제조 경제성을 변화시키고, 이는 병원 및 도매업체의 조달 전략에 영향을 미칩니다. 실무적으로, 관세로 인해 기존 공급망에 혼란이 생기면 조달 담당자는 특정 정맥주사 항생제나 비경구용 제제에 대해 공급업체 선택의 폭이 좁아지고, 리드타임이 길어지고, 조달비용이 급증할 수 있습니다.
정교한 세분화 관점을 통해 치료법 선택, 감염 상황, 병원체 프로파일, 환자 인구 통계, 의료 현장이 어떻게 교차하여 임상 및 상업적 트렌드를 형성하고 있는지 파악할 수 있습니다. 항생제 유형별로 보면, 임상의들은 복강 내 병원균의 광범위한 스펙트럼을 커버하기 위해 카르바페넴 계열, 세팔로스포린 계열, 페니실린 계열에 의존하고 있습니다. 카르바페넴 계열에서는 드리페넴, 엘타페넴, 이미페넴/실라스타틴, 메로페넴과 같은 약물이 병원균의 의심, 조직 침투성, 내성 패턴에 따라 선택됩니다. 세팔로스포린의 사용은 세포톡심, 세프트리악손과 같은 3세대와 세페핌과 같은 4세대가 구분되며, 각각 특정 그람음성균에 대한 커버리지와 적응증이 있는 경우 중추신경계로의 침투성을 고려하여 선택됩니다. 암피실린/설박탐과 피페라실린/타조박탐을 포함한 페니실린계 병용요법은 시중 감염에 의한 다제내성균 감염에 대한 경험적 치료로서 많은 의료기관 프로토콜에서 여전히 중요한 역할을 하고 있습니다.
지역적 차이는 임상 실습, 공급망 물류 및 정책 환경에 큰 영향을 미치며, 의료 제공업체와 의료 시스템이 복강내 감염증에 대처하는 방식을 형성하고 있습니다. 북미와 남미에서는 치료 프로토콜과 약물 적정 사용의 틀에서 증거에 기반한 경험적 선택과 첨단 치료 시설에서 신속한 진단의 통합이 점점 더 중요해지고 있으며, 공급망 통합과 공동구매 조직이 처방약 목록 결정과 가격 협상에 영향을 미치고 있습니다. 이러한 추세는 중요한 약품에 대한 안정적인 접근을 보장하기 위해 임상 리더와 조달 부서의 협업을 촉진하고 있습니다.
복강내 감염증 관련 치료제 및 서비스 경쟁 구도는 전통적 제약사, 수탁 제조업체, 진단 기술 혁신 기업, 임상 서비스 제공업체가 혼재되어 있는 것이 특징입니다. 전통 있는 제약사들은 안정적인 공급 라인 유지, 제품 수명주기 연장, 교육 및 처방전 수집 지원을 통한 약물 적정 사용(Stewardship) 이니셔티브 지원에 집중하는 경우가 많습니다. 수탁 제조업체와 무균 주사제 전문 제조 공장은 비경구용 항생제 공급을 확보하는 데 매우 중요한 역할을 하고 있으며, 전략적 파트너십과 생산 능력에 대한 투자 기회를 창출하고 있습니다.
의료계 리더는 임상 결과를 개선하고, 치료 접근성을 유지하며, 공급 위험을 줄이기 위해 실행 가능하고 우선순위를 정한 일련의 조치를 취해야 합니다. 첫째, 처방집의 선택, 재고 위험 및 임상적으로 허용 가능한 치료 대안에 대한 정기적인 부서 간 검토를 통해 조달과 임상 거버넌스를 일치시키고, 공급 변동에도 불구하고 연속성을 보장해야 합니다. 둘째, 신속한 진단 도구의 도입을 가속화하고, 명확한 치료 단계 축소 프로토콜을 진료 경로에 통합하여 적절한 경우 경험적 광범위 요법을 신속하게 좁혀 내성균의 선택 압력을 줄이고 상위 약제를 보존할 수 있도록 해야 합니다.
본 Executive Summary의 기초가 되는 연구는 1차 임상 데이터, 시설 수준의 운영 데이터, 종합적인 2차 연구를 통합하는 혼합 방법론적 접근법을 채택하여 견고하고 맥락에 맞는 결론을 도출했습니다. 1차 데이터는 외과, 중환자실, 감염내과, 약제과 임상의와의 구조화된 인터뷰와 자문회의를 통해 수집되었으며, 운영 실태를 파악하기 위해 조달 및 공급망 전문가가 보완했습니다. 이러한 일선의 관점은 약제 선정, 약제 적정 사용의 실천, 그리고 공급상의 돌발상황에 대한 시나리오 구축에 반영되었습니다.
본 Executive Summary에서는 다음 세 가지 우선순위가 서로 연관되어 있음을 강조하고 있습니다. 즉, 효과적인 항균제에 대한 접근성을 보장하고, 진단에 기반한 치료를 가속화하며, 공급 및 정책 변동에 대한 시스템 차원의 탄력성을 강화하는 것입니다. 임상적 측면에서 그 필요성은 분명합니다. 신속한 감염원 봉쇄와 환자 맞춤형 항균제 치료는 생명을 구할 수 있지만, 이를 일관되게 실현하기 위해서는 진단, 적정 사용 인프라 및 다학제적 협력에 대한 투자가 필요합니다. 운영 측면에서 조달 및 의약품 부문의 리더는 공급망의 혼란을 예측하고, 임상 기준을 훼손하지 않고 중요한 의약품을 확보할 수 있는 유연한 전략을 유지해야 합니다.
The Intra-abdominal Infections Market was valued at USD 26.66 billion in 2025 and is projected to grow to USD 28.93 billion in 2026, with a CAGR of 9.30%, reaching USD 49.70 billion by 2032.
| KEY MARKET STATISTICS | |
|---|---|
| Base Year [2025] | USD 26.66 billion |
| Estimated Year [2026] | USD 28.93 billion |
| Forecast Year [2032] | USD 49.70 billion |
| CAGR (%) | 9.30% |
Intra-abdominal infections represent a heterogeneous group of conditions that span simple localized inflammatory processes to complex, life-threatening polymicrobial sepsis. Clinicians confront a mix of community-acquired and hospital-acquired presentations that vary by source, host factors, and microbiology. As a result, early recognition and rapid source control remain the cornerstones of effective management, while antimicrobial selection must balance empiric breadth with de-escalation guided by culture and sensitivity data.
Diagnostic complexity stems from overlapping clinical presentations, variable culture yields, and evolving resistance patterns. Imaging, surgical assessment, and peritoneal cultures are critical, yet each has limitations that influence therapeutic timing. Concurrently, antimicrobial resistance among key pathogens has altered empirical therapy algorithms, prompting greater reliance on higher-tier agents and combination regimens in severe cases. These changes amplify the need for coordinated antimicrobial stewardship, multidisciplinary care pathways, and robust hospital surveillance to preserve therapeutic options and optimize outcomes.
Stakeholders across clinical, operational, and commercial domains must therefore align on priorities that include timely diagnostics, stewardship integration, and supply chain continuity. By understanding the clinical nuances and system pressures that drive treatment decisions, leaders can better design interventions that reduce morbidity, shorten hospital stays, and limit the collateral harm of unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure.
The landscape of intra-abdominal infection management is undergoing rapid and consequential shifts driven by antimicrobial resistance, technological advances, and changes in care delivery models. Resistance trends are reshaping empiric prescribing patterns and elevating the clinical and economic value of agents with retained activity against multidrug-resistant Gram-negative organisms. Simultaneously, innovations in rapid diagnostics and molecular pathogen detection are beginning to shorten the interval between presentation and targeted therapy, enabling faster de-escalation when appropriate and reducing unnecessary exposure to broad-spectrum agents.
Care delivery transformations are equally impactful. Growth in ambulatory surgical centers and shifts toward earlier discharge and outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy have altered patient flows and medication utilization, requiring new coordination between inpatient teams and community providers. These transitions are compounded by evolving regulatory expectations for stewardship and reporting, which place a premium on measurable metrics and program accountability. As a result, stakeholders face a landscape where clinical efficacy, supply reliability, and stewardship compliance converge to determine both patient outcomes and organizational risk.
Taken together, these forces demand adaptive strategies that integrate novel diagnostics, stewardship protocols, and supply chain resilience while maintaining clinician autonomy in critical decision moments. Organizations that proactively align clinical pathways, procurement practices, and surveillance capabilities will be better positioned to manage complexity and sustain therapeutic options over the long term.
The policy environment surrounding trade and tariffs can materially influence the cost structure and availability of antimicrobial agents, manufacturing inputs, and medical supplies integral to intra-abdominal infection care. Changes to import duties and trade barriers alter manufacturing economics for active pharmaceutical ingredients and finished dosage forms, which in turn affect procurement strategies for hospitals and distributors. In practical terms, procurement teams may experience narrower supplier options, increased lead times, and higher acquisition costs for select intravenous antibiotics and parenteral formulations when tariffs disrupt established supply chains.
Clinicians and pharmacy leaders should anticipate secondary effects that manifest as alterations in hospital formularies and therapeutic guidelines. When sourcing constraints or price pressures exist, hospitals commonly reassess formulary inclusions and may substitute clinically equivalent agents or adjust stewardship policies to preserve critical stock. These operational responses require clear clinical governance to prevent unintended consequences such as suboptimal empiric coverage or inappropriate substitution in high-risk patients.
Moreover, manufacturers and contract manufacturers may respond to tariff-driven margin pressures by relocating production, redesigning supply agreements, or accelerating investments in regional manufacturing to mitigate exposure. Such strategic adaptations can improve long-term resilience but create short-term volatility. Therefore, cross-functional planning that combines procurement forecasting, inventory buffering, and continual clinical oversight is essential to maintain access and clinical integrity in the face of tariff-induced supply chain disruption.
A nuanced segmentation lens reveals how therapeutic choices, infection contexts, pathogen profiles, patient demographics, and care settings intersect to shape clinical and commercial dynamics. By antibiotic class, clinicians rely on carbapenems, cephalosporins, and penicillins to cover the broad spectrum of intra-abdominal pathogens. Within carbapenems, agents such as doripenem, ertapenem, imipenem/cilastatin, and meropenem are deployed based on pathogen suspicion, tissue penetration requirements, and resistance patterns. Cephalosporin use differentiates between third-generation options like cefotaxime and ceftriaxone and fourth-generation cefepime, each selected for specific Gram-negative coverage and central nervous system penetration when indicated. Penicillin-based combinations, including ampicillin/sulbactam and piperacillin/tazobactam, retain an important role for community-acquired polymicrobial infections and as empiric therapy in many institutional protocols.
Infection type segmentation between community-acquired and hospital-acquired presentations changes therapeutic imperatives. Community-acquired cases, subdivided into complicated and uncomplicated forms, often permit narrower empiric coverage when patients present without recent healthcare exposure. Conversely, hospital-acquired infections, whether associated with ICU care or post-surgical settings, demand broader empiric regimens because of increased risk of multidrug-resistant organisms. Pathogen-driven insight distinguishes anaerobic organisms such as Bacteroides fragilis and Clostridium species from Gram-negative pathogens including Enterobacteriaceae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and from Gram-positive agents like Enterococcus species and Staphylococcus aureus, each of which drives different empiric and definitive therapy choices and stewardship challenges.
Patient age group further modulates therapeutic decisions, as adult, geriatric, and pediatric populations present distinct pharmacokinetic and safety considerations that affect dosing, formulation selection, and monitoring. Finally, end user segmentation between ambulatory care centres and hospitals, with hospitals split into secondary and tertiary care, determines resource availability, access to advanced diagnostics, and procedural capabilities for source control. Collectively, these intersecting segments demand tailored clinical pathways, procurement strategies, and education programs to ensure that each patient cohort receives optimal, context-appropriate care.
Regional variation exerts a profound influence on clinical practice, supply chain logistics, and policy environments, shaping how providers and health systems approach intra-abdominal infections. In the Americas, treatment protocols and stewardship frameworks increasingly emphasize evidence-based empiric selection and the integration of rapid diagnostics in high-acuity centers, while supply chain consolidation and group purchasing organizations influence formulary decisions and pricing negotiations. These dynamics encourage coordination between clinical leaders and procurement to ensure consistent access to critical agents.
In Europe, Middle East & Africa, heterogeneity in healthcare infrastructure, regulatory oversight, and antimicrobial resistance profiles creates divergent priorities. High-resource centers may focus on rapid molecular diagnostics and advanced stewardship programs, whereas resource-constrained settings prioritize access to essential antibiotics, basic imaging, and surgical capacity. Policy-level interventions and regional collaborations play a larger role in supporting antimicrobial stewardship and addressing resistance surveillance in this diverse region.
Asia-Pacific presents a combination of high-volume clinical demand, rapid technological adoption, and varied domestic manufacturing capacity. Regional manufacturers can mitigate some supply disruptions, but demand pressures and resistance trends necessitate coordinated national strategies for stewardship and procurement. Across all regions, the interplay between regulation, manufacturing geography, and clinical practice determines both short-term operational choices and long-term resilience of supply and therapeutic options.
The competitive landscape for therapies and services relevant to intra-abdominal infections is characterized by a mix of established pharmaceutical manufacturers, contract producers, diagnostic innovators, and clinical service providers. Established drug producers often focus on maintaining reliable supply lines, extending product lifecycles, and supporting stewardship initiatives through education and formulary support. Contract manufacturers and specialized sterile injectable plants play a pivotal role in ensuring availability of parenteral antibiotics, creating opportunities for strategic partnerships and capacity investments.
Diagnostic companies and hospital laboratory networks are increasingly influential, as rapid identification technologies and susceptibility platforms directly change prescribing behavior and reduce time to optimal therapy. Collaboration between diagnostic vendors and clinical leaders can yield pathway-level improvements that reduce inappropriate broad-spectrum use and speed targeted therapy. Additionally, service providers that support outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy and post-discharge monitoring are expanding the continuum of care, enabling earlier transition from inpatient settings without sacrificing safety.
Strategic alliances between pharmaceutical manufacturers, diagnostic firms, and healthcare systems can create integrated offerings that pair reliable antimicrobial supply with diagnostic stewardship. Such collaboration also supports joint efforts to address antimicrobial resistance through data sharing, formulary optimization, and targeted education for prescribers and care teams.
Healthcare leaders should adopt a set of practical, prioritized actions to strengthen clinical outcomes, maintain therapeutic access, and mitigate supply risks. First, align procurement and clinical governance by instituting regular cross-functional reviews of formulary choices, inventory exposure, and clinically acceptable therapeutic alternatives to ensure continuity in the face of supply variability. Second, accelerate adoption of rapid diagnostic tools and embed explicit de-escalation protocols into care pathways so that empiric broad-spectrum therapy is narrowed promptly when appropriate, reducing resistance selection pressure and conserving higher-tier agents.
Third, expand outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy frameworks and strengthen discharge coordination to reduce inpatient length of stay while maintaining safety. Fourth, implement tiered stewardship metrics that account for infection type, pathogen risk, and patient age to target education and audit efforts where they will have the greatest clinical impact. Fifth, engage manufacturers and contract manufacturers proactively through multi-year agreements, dual-sourcing where feasible, and contingency planning to alleviate tariff- or disruption-related scarcity. Finally, invest in workforce training that equips surgical teams, intensivists, pharmacists, and infectious disease specialists with the skills to execute rapid source control, optimized dosing, and coordinated follow-up care.
Taken together, these actions balance immediate operational resilience with long-term stewardship objectives, positioning organizations to deliver high-quality care while preserving therapeutic effectiveness.
The research underpinning this executive summary uses a mixed-methods approach that integrates primary clinical inputs, facility-level operational data, and comprehensive secondary research to ensure robust, context-sensitive conclusions. Primary inputs were gathered through structured interviews and advisory discussions with clinicians across surgical, critical care, infectious disease, and pharmacy disciplines, complemented by procurement and supply chain professionals to capture operational realities. These firsthand perspectives informed scenario building around drug selection, stewardship practices, and supply contingencies.
Secondary research synthesized peer-reviewed literature, clinical guidelines, regulatory documents, and publicly available surveillance data from health authorities to ground findings in established evidence. Real-world data sources such as hospital utilization patterns, antimicrobial consumption records, and laboratory susceptibility reports were analyzed to identify practice variation and resistance trends. Where applicable, data triangulation validated qualitative insights against observable operational metrics.
Analytical methods included comparative clinical pathway mapping, sensitivity analysis of supply disruption scenarios, and stakeholder impact assessments to prioritize recommendations. Throughout the process, attention to data provenance, methodological transparency, and expert validation ensured that conclusions reflect clinical reality and operational feasibility.
This executive synthesis highlights a set of converging priorities: protect access to effective antimicrobials, accelerate diagnostic-driven therapy, and reinforce system-level resilience against supply and policy volatility. Clinically, the imperative is clear-prompt source control and tailored antimicrobial therapy save lives, but achieving this consistently requires investments in diagnostics, stewardship infrastructure, and cross-disciplinary coordination. Operationally, procurement and pharmacy leaders must anticipate supply chain shocks and maintain flexible strategies that safeguard critical agents without compromising clinical standards.
Strategically, the market environment rewards organizations that integrate diagnostics with therapeutic planning and that form durable partnerships with manufacturers and service providers to ensure supply reliability. Policy changes, including tariff adjustments and evolving regulatory expectations, will continue to create both risks and opportunities; responsive systems will be those that combine clinical rigor with agile contracting and contingency planning. Ultimately, translating insight into improved patient outcomes depends on aligning clinical pathways, stewardship goals, and procurement practices so that each reinforces the others in routine care and crisis response.
Leaders who operationalize these priorities will not only mitigate immediate risks but also contribute to broader efforts to preserve antimicrobial effectiveness and improve outcomes for patients with intra-abdominal infections.