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July/Aug 2016

Volume 17, Issue 4

 

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Articles in this Issue

  • Brazil: Improving Your External Relationship Management for More Effective Temperature - Controlled...

    Luiz Alberto Barberini, CQE, CPIM , MBA
    We’ve all heard that Brazil is a giant. And, as we know from fairy tales, a giant can have an own unpredictable nature that can make things difficult. This analogy can be used in our logistics and supply world. When in such a situation, what exactly happens and how do we manage the giant’s bad mood?
  • Managing Cold Chain Distribution Across the Global Supply Chain: Trends and Regulations

    Bikash Chatterjee
    Supply chains now span the globe and are increasing in complexity as organizations move away from regional business models to manufacturing and distribution on a world scale. A critical byproduct of good manufacturing practice (GMP), an unbroken cold chain ensures product safety, efficacy and overall quality for patients.
  • Current Trends in Global Distribution and Supply Chain

    Dave Dreifke
    When working through the nuances of moving clinical supplies globally, my mind often wanders back to a scenario that occurred several years ago. During a meeting to determine a course of action to facilitate the customs release of clinical supplies in a South American country, a member of senior management entered the conference room to express disbelief in the possibility of supplies being held by customs authorities. “How can this occur? It’s simple, you grab the supplies, put them in a box, label it, put together a packing slip and you’re done.” Wow, don’t we wish it were that easy!
  • Hard Truths about Executing Outsourcing Relationships

    Kenneth Getz, Mary Jo Lamberti
    By far the fastest growing area of R&D spending is outsourcing. Exceeding $60 billion in 2016, sponsor company spending on contract R&D services is growing at six times the annual rate of spending on internal staff, infrastructure and technology support. Indeed, by 2017, according to the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development (Tufts CSDD), contract research services will overtake all other areas as the largest category of R&D spending.
  • Horizon Lines: A Yearly Review of NDAs - 2015

    Harshada Sant, MS, Amitkumar Lad, PhD, Hemant N. Joshi, Ph.D., MBA
    For decades, the regulation and control of new drugs in the United States has been based on the New Drug Application (NDA). Since 1938, every new drug has been the subject of an approved NDA before U.S. commercialization. This column summarizes details on all the NDAs approved in the year 2015.
  • Biopharma Vendors Offering Services Bundled With Products

    Eric S. Langer
    Vendors to the biopharmaceutical manufacturing industry are seeing an opportunity to offer valuable services that complement their products. This is increasingly a strategic priority for introducing new products, according to BioPlan Associates’ latest annual industry study, the 13th Annual Report and Survey of Biopharmaceutical Manufacturing Capacity and Production. 1 This could be seen as a response to rising demand for outsourced services, and comes as vendors are seeing growing business from offering services.
  • Coming Clean on Quality in the Chemical Manufacturing Lab

    Ed Price
    The price of ensuring quality in chemical manufacturing goes far beyond cost. Hopefully, quality problems are caught before they can affect patients but even then, such problems can make or break a manufacturing organization. In the U.S., while it takes significant effort to earn and maintain cGMP standards, quality control can be the difference between a CMO’s success and failure in the race to commercialize vital drugs.
  • Overcoming the Challenges of Critical Reagent and Kit Lot-to-Lot Variability in Support of...

    Dr. Afshin Safavi, PhD
    Critical reagents are essential components of ligand binding assays (LBA), and include many reagent categories including antibodies, engineered proteins, conjugated proteins, chemically synthesized molecules, complex biologics, and solid-supported reagents.
  • What Are the Latest Guidelines for Excipients?

    Guy Tiene, MA
    The global outlook for excipients looks bright, as the market is expected to grow at an annual compound rate of of 7.6% from 2015 to 2020, reaching $6.4 billion by 2020.1 The major factors driving market growth are the growing demand for pharmaceutical products and functional excipients, the increasing generic drug market, and the emergence of new excipients. Drug manufacturers also rely on excipients to develop value-added and distinct products at a lower cost without compromising quality, such as extended-release formulations.
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