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Resilience of Pharma Supply Chains and the Impact of Covid-19 Pandemic

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Resilience of Pharma Supply Chains and the Impact of Covid-19 Pandemic

How is the COVID-19 crisis influencing pharma supply chains for the future? Is the global pharma supply chain under sustained threat? And what about Asia and its dominance in the supply chain? These are all valid questions considering recent and current events.

It is generally agreed that COVID-19 marks a point in the understanding of medicine supply risks, but will it fuel efforts to establish local supplies of chemicals and APIs as a “matter of national security”? In the last 12 months, Pharma companies have become acutely aware of their dependency on complex supply chains. As the result, the pandemic has finally convinced all stakeholders to build more resilience into their supply chains going forward.

In the last 10 years or so, lower costs have been a key decider in relocating a significant share of manufacturing capabilities to China and India. We have, therefore, seen a large increase in production volumes in these countries where we know that almost 40% of registered sites for APIs were located in India or China, according to FDA data published in 2019.

The relocation of manufacturing to Asia has a direct impact on supply chain reliability and has led to drug shortages.

Believe it or not, drug shortages are not rare events and don’t just happen when there are worldwide pandemics. The average drug shortage in the US lasts 14 months…some last for years.

Before COVID-19, the FDA had already placed 145 pharmaceutical products on its drug shortages list. In April 2021, there were 175 drugs on the FDA drug shortages list.

Covid-19 didn’t have the foreseen catastrophic effect. There are several reasons for this:

-The pharma industry had a sufficient inventory buffer (average inventory is about 180 days for the entire industry)

-Drug manufacturing has long lead times, so the effect of 1-2 weeks manufacturing cessation in China would take some time to cycle through the supply chain.

-Supply disruptions of APIs or finished products made in China were not hugely prolonged, otherwise, the effects would have been more severe.

-Regulatory challenges for medicines were largely overcome, where required, by flexibilities introduced by regulators to fast-track regulatory processes. For example,

-Fast-tracking approvals to alternative sources of supply of reagents

-Ensuring availability of GMP certification to manufacture and import

-Remote auditing options

-Labelling and Packaging flexibility

Switching sources of supply (which is not straightforward in the pharmaceutical industry) was not extensively required…

-There was a relatively short period of logistical and distribution challenge. Demand spikes for transportation capacity was placed under enormous strain compounded by (i) surge in international demand for PPE, sanitiser, critical care medicine and medical devices (ii) Disruptions at ports (iii) Decreased capacity on Air Freight (iv) Re-routing of transportation (v) Personnel availability constraints due to lockdowns/quarantine (vi) Increased prices. Routes have already opened, and lockdowns are slowly being phased out.

However, despite all of this, local, regional, shorter supply routes are preferred in the current crisis and the environmental agenda is driving this theme globally.

Even if the manufacture of APIs or fine chemicals was more regionally dispersed or locally based, the raw materials for these manufacturers may not be available in these locations anyway.

It appears that we will have to manage the reality that raw material availability and cost are critical factors in where pharmaceutical manufacturing resides. As a result, increased resilience will need to be factored into our supply chains which will include sourcing, at some level, from Asia and the ROW. Moving production closer to home markets would be costly and would take years to accomplish. The smarter approach is to build resilience into the supply chain. How is this achieved?

The key is to ensure there is a risk management plan in place that focuses on the evaluation of potential issues arising from the loss of a supply chain partner or a region. This requires

-Alternate supply arrangements

-Inventory levels to provide a potential buffer

-Agile Manufacturing

This is infinitely more challenging than it seems. It means that organizations need to precisely know the quantity of each raw material or medicinal product in the supply chain and where it is at any given moment. This leads to hyper-complexity where advanced algorithms (and data analytics/AI) will be required to help design supply chains with greater resilience and risk monitoring capability.

Designing resiliency into the supply chain should incorporate placing inventory at the right points of the supply chain network (i.e., the right inventory commensurate to the risk at that point in the supply chain).

Investment in real-time production monitoring systems and integrated planning and scheduling tools (LEAN tools) could increase the agility of existing manufacturing sites to speed up supply and reduce requirements for additional expensive production equipment.

The pharmaceutical industry will continue to build resilience and secure itself against volatility in supply from Asia…perhaps at a faster pace than before.

Next time… could it be another virus, a mosquito, or a resistant bacterium?

However, we should not lose focus on the immediate supply chain challenge.

Supply chains need to plan now for resilience to navigate the current turbulent market.

vaccines

Report: Global Vaccines Market

The U.S. vaccine market is anticipated to experience growth of 8.9% CAGR during the forecast timeframe. The high adoption rate of vaccines to reduce the incidence of infectious diseases along with several initiatives undertaken by government by increasing immunization rates and recommendations should stimulate business growth.

Japan’s vaccine market will grow significantly over the coming years to reach over USD 6.0 billion by 2025. Introduction of the routine vaccination program in October 2016 leading to the introduction of numerous important and routine vaccines having a higher rate of administration as compared to voluntary vaccines should drive the Japan vaccine market.

Increasing demand for preventive vaccines, the rising number of people suffering from infectious as well as non-infectious diseases globally will drive the vaccine market over the forecast timeframe. Increasing government funding for vaccine development will further boost industry growth.

Widespread routine vaccination programs and numerous initiatives undertaken by governments to encourage vaccine administration especially in developing and underdeveloped countries will positively impact industry growth. Growing awareness about reduced mortality due to immunization should propel vaccines industry growth over the forecast period.

High adoption of new vaccines coupled with technological advancements should stimulate business growth. Moreover, a strong product pipeline of leading companies such as Merck, Novavax, Emergent BioSolutions will lead to industry expansion over the coming years. However, high costs associated with transportation and storage of vaccines will limit the vaccines market growth to a certain extent over the foreseeable future.

Each time a nation is hit by an epidemic wave, children are one of the groups that take the deadliest hit. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1 or 2 of every 1,000 children who are diagnosed with measles die. During the nation’s recently witnessed measles outbreak, around 92 percent of children received a combination vaccine that prevents measles, rubella, and mumps. Immunization programs prevent and protect toddlers and infants from dangerous complications and failing to vaccinate may certainly put them at risk for fatal diseases. This has escalated the demand for vaccines for kids, which has subsequently influenced the growth curve of the vaccines market from the pediatric populace.

As per estimates, vaccines industry size from the pediatric age group is set to witness a CAGR of 9.1% over 2019-2025, given the high vulnerability of kids to infectious diseases along with the increasing implementation of pediatric immunization programs.

Driven by the ongoing pace of urbanization and the rising awareness regarding the potential dangers a pandemic can inculcate, the global vaccines industry is gaining increased attention. According to a new research report by Global Market Insights, Inc., the overall vaccines market size is anticipated to surpass $70 billion by 2025.

Some of the major market players involved in the global vaccines market are Merck, AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Novartis, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Abbott, Sanofi Pasteur, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Emergent BioSolutions, CSL, Astellas Pharma and Novavax. Firms are focusing on product launch to fortify their product base and market reach over the coming years.

Source: Global Market Insights, Inc.