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September/October 2016

Volume 17, Issue 5

 

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Articles in this Issue

  • Ensuring Data Quality in an Outsourcing Environment

    Elizabeth Admirand
    The hurdles and costs associated with bringing a drug through the development and approval process have skyrocketed. Over the past forty years, the average cost of running a preclinical program has jumped from hundreds of millions of dollars to billions of dollars. This financial commitment is burdensome for everyone in the pharmaceutical industry but can be crushing for a small company.
  • Pharma By Air: Equipment Qualification and Route Risk Assessment

    Zvonimir Majic PhD, Erik J. van Asselt, PhD, Rafik H. Bishara, Ph.D.
    Global air freight industry contributes with 0.5% of global world trade in volume but raises at the same time up to 35% of its value or $6.4 trillion according to Air Transport Action Group (ATAG). Managing the transportation of temperature controlled products (refrigerated and frozen) will total $12.6 Billion in 2016 of the total of $78.8 Billion pharma logistics market.
  • The United States Pharmacopeia (USP) New Chapter on the Storage and Distribution of Investigational...

    Jeffery M. Carrico
    The USP has created a new chapter to address the storage and distribution of IDP. This is significant because it is the first time in the long history of USP standards that this topic has been addressed. But in order to fully understand the depth and scope of this new chapter, the history of its inception must be covered first.
  • Meeting Current and Future Serialization Challenges

    Christian Gross
    Serialization has emerged as a complex challenge for the pharmaceuticals sector. The industry is currently facing a multiplicity of differing regulations governing serialization that vary from one country to another. Several countries including China, South Korea, Turkey, Argentina and Brazil already have different types of regulations in place, that must be complied with, that in turn require different types of serialization solutions for their pharmaceuticals, whilst many others, including countries in the EU and the US, face pending compliance requirements.
  • HORIZON LINES A Review of NDAs for January-February, 2016

    Harshada Sant, MS, Hemant N. Joshi, Ph.D., MBA
    This column summarizes New Drug Applications (NDAs) for January-February, 2016. In these two months, FDA approved 25 NDAs.
  • Biopharmaceutical Manufacturing Globalization Continues

    Eric S. Langer
    Around 45% of biopharmaceutical manufacturing organizations expect to off-shore at least some of their operations over the next five years, with the figure dependent on the nature of the activity, according to BioPlan Associates’ 13th Annual Report and Survey of Biopharmaceutical Manufacturing Capacity and Production.
  • Sample Handling and Processing: Its Impact on Bioanalytical Test Results

    Haiko Pillu
    When clinical trials were first developed to test the effectiveness of drugs in treating diseases, it was usual to carry out tests using multiple drug samples, including for pharmacokinetics (PK) and other assessments such as pharmacodynamics (PD). Samples were taken individually, and the time required for processing each was limited. Typical preparation techniques included centrifugation, aliquoting and freezing. Other preparative techniques would be employed when larger sample preparation flows were necessary.
  • The CMO/Sponsor Relationship: How to Strike the Perfect Balance

    Ed Price
    The roles of Contract Manufacturing Organizations (CMOs) and Contract Research Organizations (CROs) are growing at light speed as pharma, life sciences and biotech firms of all shapes and sizes discover the benefit of outsourcing key functions in the race to get products to commercialization faster and more efficiently. But unlike the traditional model, in which a company conducts R&D, as well as manufacturing and commercialization in-house, this new services-based model requires a new way of thinking. So what does it take to ensure a good working relationship between a sponsoring organization and the CMO/CRO?
  • CMO/CDMOs: Looking Ahead

    Gil Y. Roth
    The number one trend from last year’s edition demands a repeat (see - (http://pharma-bio.org/pdfs/CPhI%20annual%20report%202015.pdf - page 46). The CMO/CDMO sector remains fragmented, and business logic dictates that the sector needs to consolidate (or rationalize, if that’s your term of choice). It’s been this way for years, so if we keep calling for it, it’s bound to happen, right?
  • Raw Material Supply: Many Issues to Manage

    Govindra Singh
    Whether producing biologic or small-molecule drugs, pharmaceutical manufacturers (sponsors and contract service organizations) must manage a complex network of raw material suppliers, which provide chemical and biological materials; including starting compounds, intermediates, solvents, cell lines, yeast, bacteria, cell-culture media and feeds, excipients, production materials such as tubing, single-use manufacturing equipment and packaging materials, among others. Ensuring that the correct materials have been received and that they meet quality and other specifications (such as manufacture under GMP conditions) can be a daunting task. Extensive collaboration with preferred suppliers and reliance on third-party vendors that can handle some of the workload are two strategies that can help simplify the issue and reduce supply chain risk.
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