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Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) Process Report 2016 - Market Trends, Unmet Needs & Challenges, and Ecosystem Analysis - Research and Markets
[July 06, 2016]

Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) Process Report 2016 - Market Trends, Unmet Needs & Challenges, and Ecosystem Analysis - Research and Markets


Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) Process Report - Market Trends, Unmet Needs & Challenges, and Ecosystem Analysis" report to their offering.

The NGS process space is extremely busy with many commercial players that provide sequencing reagents, instruments, and analysis solutions. An extensive analysis of this space highlights that as the sequencing technology has matured, the challenges have shifted toward data explosion and computing, data interpretation to gather and report actionable information, and information management.

This report is unique, in that it is not a predictive market research report, but rather builds on data gathered from the many end-user interviews and the data available in the scientific literature.

Our specific analysis identified the obvious top players which includes Illumina on the instruments side (and to some extent on the reagents side), Thermo Fisher Scientific, and Pacific Biosciences; Illumina also offers a data analysis and interpretation solution via BaseSpace. Agilent (News - Alert) technologies, Qiagen, and Thermo Fisher Scientific are the main actors on the reagents side, while on the analysis side we observe several providers that are strong in different areas of data analysis and interpretation. DNAnexus (News - Alert) and Seven Bridges Genomics have emerged as open and flexible platforms for data analysis, Bluebee, Genalie, and Edico Genome as alternatives enabling fast DNA processing.



On the data interpretation side we have several noteworthy companies such as Congenica, Ingenuity (Qiagen), Omicia, Station X, or WuXi NextCODE offering elegant interpretation solutions. Alongside these established companies, we should not overlook the significant impact of open source tools that command a sizable share of the data analysis volume (-68% of all users still use in-house or open source tools for their analyses - some as standalone solutions and some in combination with commercially available offerings), such as the Broad Institute Scientific Community Software and Sanger Institute Tools and Software made available to the entire community.

Key Topics Covered:


1. The Lab Components Including Reagents & Sequencing Instruments

- Top life science product suppliers in the NGS literature

- Top products by reagents and sequencing instrument vendors

- Sequencing instruments in the literature

- Top 20 countries, institutions, and researchers across the NGS space

2. User type

- The non-computational researcher

- The computational researcher

- End-user sample and library preparation reagents and kits preferences

- End-user sequencing instrument preferences

3. The NGS Analysis and Interpretation Ecosystem

- NGS utilization and analysis challenges

- Deep dive into secondary analysis and tertiary interpretational tool companies

4. Concluding notes

- Data explosion

- Training non-computational scientists

- Information management

- Knowledge extraction and actionable reporting

- End-to-end-solutions

- Reporting of clinical findings

5. Company/Product Profiles

- Agilent Technologies (News - Alert)

- BaseSpace (Illumina)

- Bina Technologies

- Bluebee

- CLC Bio

- Congenica

- DNAnexus

- Edico Genome

- Genalice

- Ingenuity with IPA and IVA (Qiagen)

- New England Biolabs

- Omicia

- Qiagen

- Seven Bridges Genomics

- Station X

- Thermo Fisher Scientific

- Wuxi NextCODE Genomics

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/htwpjt/nextgeneration


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