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Transforming the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain - Hedley Rees

Transforming the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
368 Seiten
2025
John Wiley & Sons Inc (Verlag)
978-1-394-24412-6 (ISBN)
CHF 149,95 inkl. MwSt
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Effective and insightful solutions to the most pressing supply chain challenges facing pharmaceutical companies today

In Transforming the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain, veteran biotech supply chain strategist, Hedley Rees, delivers a reasoned and systematic solution to the most widespread and relevant challenges in the pharmaceutical supply chain. The book explains the deeply rooted issues within pharma supply chains and the modus operandi of the industry while also discussing effective solutions to the underlying causes that led to widespread system breakdown.

The author applies modern methods of product development and commercial supply successfully used by leaders in the field. He provides real-world examples of ways to make the delivery of medicines to patients efficient and effective.

Readers will also find:



A clear explanation of the development, manufacture, and delivery of drugs to patients
Comprehensive explorations of the issues and challenges to the current supply chain system paired with effective solutions
Expert witness accounts, anecdotes, case studies and examples of pharmaceutical supply chain difficulties and solutions
Complete treatments of how to adapt supply chain techniques to a pharmaceutical era dominated by biologics and advanced therapies

Perfect for pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical professionals working in drug development, Transforming the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain will also benefit industry professionals with a responsibility for the logistics, commercial supply, manufacturing, regulation, quality management, finance, and marketing of pharmaceuticals.

Hedley Rees, PhD, is Managing Consultant at PharmaFlow Ltd. He has 25 years’ experience in the biotech industry, advising drug developers in the strategic management of their preclinical, clinical, and commercial supply chains. He is the author of Supply Chain Management in the Drug Industry: Delivering Patient Value for Pharmaceuticals and Biologics.

Foreword xi

Preface xv

Acknowledgments xvii

Introduction 1

Setting a Transformative Agenda 1

What Should You Expect to Take Away from This Book? 2

Book Format 3

Who Should Benefit from Reading This Book? 5

Research Methodology 6

A Positive View of the Future 6

More Than a Generation of Change Will Be Required 7

References 7

Section I The Pharmaceutical Industry and Its Supply Chain 9

1 Industry Basics 11

Pharmaceutical Products 11

Industry Business Models and the Supply Chain 12

References 20

2 The Pharmaceutical Supply Chain 21

The End-to-end (E2E) Supply Chain in Perspective 21

Production Supply Chain: Small Molecule Products (Originator and Generic) 21

Production Supply Chain: Biologic Products (Originator and Biosimilar) 24

Production Supply Chain: Advanced Therapies—Autologous 30

References 36

3 Regulation of Pharmaceutical Products 39

Regulatory Authorities 39

Licensing Medicinal Products for Sale 40

Electronic Common Technical Document 41

Drug Development Programs 42

Regulatory Good Practices (GxP) 43

Expert Witness Statement: Alan Kennedy 48

Regulatory Modernization Initiatives 52

References 62

4 Evidence of Serious Supply Chain Problems Emerge 65

U.S. Government Accountability Office Sounds an Important Warning Bell 65

The Heparin Tragedy 67

FDA/Xavier University Co-sponsored Global Outsourcing Conference (GOC) 68

Governments and Regulatory Authorities Respond 71

References 78

5 Investigating Worrying Supply Chain Symptoms 81

Large Pharmaceutical Companies Outsource Their Assets 81

The Valley of Death Creates the Patent Cliff 85

Merger and Acquisition Becomes the Next Strategic Realignment 85

The Emergence of Biologics (eg Monoclonal Antibodies) 87

Commercial Potential of Recombinant DNA 88

What Is the Purpose of the Orphan Drug Act? 91

Value-based Pricing and HEOR Groups Emerge 92

Symptoms Transition to Deep Concerns 98

References 104

6 Impact of the Systems Dynamic on Supply Chain Performance 107

Circling Back to Professor Andrew Cox's Assessment 107

Supply Chain Underperformance Through the Development Process 108

Differences Between the Commercial and Clinical Supply Chain Challenges 112

Commercial Launch and Supply (and Phase IV—Clinical Trials After Launch) 115

7 The Outcome 119

Politicians Have Been Calling Out the Spiraling Price of Drugs 119

Wildly Varying Estimates of Drug Development Costs and Clinical Trial Failures 119

Generic Drugs Are Not Always the Same as the Originator’s 120

Animal Testing Is Still the Only Way 121

Me-too Drugs 122

Patient-centricity Is About Brands Not Cures 122

Counterfeit Drugs 123

Price Gouging 123

Is Big Pharma Becoming More Focused on the Patient These Days? 124

Does the Industry Overlook Side Effects? 124

Expert Witness Statement: Dr Ray Perkins 125

Do Genes Define Our Biological and Medical Destiny? 129

Of Missing Methods, Moldy Models, Mutated Mindsets, and Muddled Medications 131

To Ship or Not to Ship? That Is the Question 133

Basic Assumptions in the Pharmaceutical Industry 135

Impact of Basic Assumptions 138

An Expert Witness Statement: Professor Daniel Steenstra 138

What Is a Paradigm Shift? 139

References 141

Section II Managing the Supply Chain Strategically 143

8 Introduction to Socio-technical Systems 145

What is a System? 145

Closed and Open Systems 145

The Socio-technical System 147

Systems Complexity in the Supply Chain: Bullwhip Effect 153

Example of a High-performing Socio-technical (Production) System 154

References 155

9 Fundamentals of the Supply Chain 157

What Is a Supply Chain? 157

The Supply Chain in Modern Times 158

Three States in the Supply Chain 159

Reference 160

10 The Supply Chain and Competitive Edge 161

Supply Chains, Not Products, Compete 161

Linking Porter’s Value Chain Model to the Supply Chain System 164

Expert Witness Statement: Nick Rich, PhD, Professor in Operations Management, Business, at Swansea University 167

References 169

11 Core Disciplines of Supply Chain Management 171

Planning and Inventory Management 171

Strategic Procurement 189

Transport Logistics 197

References 209

12 Support Disciplines of Supply Chain Management 211

Information Systems (IS) and Information Technology (IT) 211

Industrial Improvement 219

Expert Witness—Javid Cheema 226

Leadership and Culture in the Supply Chain 239

References 255

Section III Transforming the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain 257

13 Shifting the Paradigm Gear 259

Why Change? 259

Underpinning Principles of the New Paradigm 261

Time to Switch on Your Imagination 263

Aviation as a Comparator with Pharmaceuticals 265

Redefining Basic Assumptions for the New Paradigm 266

References 268

14 Heuristic Methodology to Define the Transformation 269

Primary Analysis 270

Supporting Evidence 270

Small Molecule Product Supply Chain 270

Primary Analysis 270

Supporting Evidence 271

Confirmatory Supporting Evidence 273

Cimetidine—More Confirmatory Supporting Evidence 275

Biologic Product Supply Chain (Including Allogeneic Products) 279

Overview 283

Manufacturing Capability 283

References 284

15 Introducing the Pharmaceutical Production System 285

Drugs Are Physical Products 285

A New Model for Product Development 287

Adopting Production Systems Principles in Hospitals 291

References 293

16 Catalyst of Radical Change 295

The First Step 295

Criteria for Patentability: New and Useful Process 296

The Patent Came After the Process 296

What Is Compound Claims Patent Law? [2] 297

What Is the Purpose of Patent? 298

Compound Claims for New Molecules 299

Patent Law Moves Center Stage 300

Previous and Ongoing Patent Change Initiatives 300

References 304

17 Delivering the Transformation with Stakeholders Onboard 305

Returning to Purpose 305

What Can Key Stakeholders Do to Help? 310

Governments 310

Regulatory Authorities 313

Clinicians in the Healthcare System 314

Investors in Drug Development 315

Universities and Colleges 315

Patients 317

Key Stakeholder Groups Inside the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain 317

Engaging Pharmaceuticals in Supply Chain Management (SCM) 320

More than a Generation of Change Is Required 320

References 321

Appendices 323

Index 341

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 158 x 231 mm
Gewicht 680 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Chemie
Technik Umwelttechnik / Biotechnologie
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Logistik / Produktion
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Marketing / Vertrieb
ISBN-10 1-394-24412-6 / 1394244126
ISBN-13 978-1-394-24412-6 / 9781394244126
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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