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                      Pharma 2020:
                      Supplying the future
                      Which path will you take?

Pharmaceuticals and
Life Sciences
Previous publications
in this series include:


Pharmaceuticals
                                          Published in June 2007, this       Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences
                                                                                                                        Fourth in the Pharma 2020
                                          paper highlights a number of                                                  series and published in April
                                          issues that will have a major                                                 2009, this report highlights
                                          bearing on the industry by                                                    how Pharma’s fully integrated
Pharma 2020: The vision                                                      Pharma 2020: Challenging business models
Which path will you take?*                2020. The publication outlines     Which path will you take?                  business models may not be
                                          the changes we believe will best                                              the best option for the pharma
                                          help pharmaceutical companies                                                 industry in 2020; more creative
                                          realise the potential the future                                              collaboration models may be
                                          holds to enhance the value they                                               more attractive. This paper also
                                          provide to shareholders and                                                   evaluates the advantages and
                                          society alike.                                                                disadvantages of the alternative
                                                                                                                        business models and how each
                                                                                                                        stands up against the challenges
                                                                                                                        facing the industry.
*connectedthinking                  
Pharma 2020: The vision               #




Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences
                                          This report, published in June     Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences
                                                                                                                        The fifth report in our series,
                                          2008, explores opportunities                                                  published in December 2009,
                                          to improve the R&D process. It                                                focuses on the opportunities
                                          proposes that new technologies     Pharma 2020: Taxing times ahead
                                                                                                                        and challenges from a tax
Pharma 2020: Virtual R&D
Which path will you take?                 will enable the adoption of        Which path will you take?                  perspective. It discusses how the
                                          virtual R&D; and by operating                                                 political, economic, scientific and
                                          in a more connected world                                                     social trends currently shaping
                                          the industry, in collaboration                                                the commercial environment,
                                          with researchers, governments,                                                together with the development of
                                          healthcare payers and                                                         new, more collaborative business
                                          providers, can address the                                                    models, will exert increasing
                                          changing needs of society more                                                pressure on effective tax rates
                                          effectively.                                                                  within the industry. It also
                                                                                                                        shows how companies can adapt
                                                                                                                        their tax strategies to support
                                                                                                                        the provision of outcomes-
Pharma 2020: Virtual R&D              1




                                                                                                                        based healthcare and remain
Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences
                                          Published in February 2009, this                                              competitive.
                                          paper discusses the key forces
                                          reshaping the pharmaceutical
                                          marketplace, including the
Pharma 2020: Marketing the future
Which path will you take?                 growing power of healthcare
                                          payers, providers and patients,
                                          and the changes required to
                                          create a marketing and sales
                                          model that is fit for the 21st
                                          century. These changes will
                                          enable the industry to market
                                          and sell its products more
                                          cost-effectively, to create new
                                          opportunities and to generate
                                          greater customer loyalty across
                                          the healthcare spectrum.


All these publications are available to download at: www.pwc.com/pharma2020
Table of contents


                                      Introduction	                                       2
                                      The times they are a-changin’	                      3
                                      •	 New product types
                                      •	 Live licensing
                                      •	 The increasing emphasis on outcomes
                                      •	 New modes of healthcare delivery
                                      •	 The growing importance of the emerging markets
                                      •	 Greater public scrutiny
                                      •	 Environmental pressures
                                      •	 The collective impact of these trends

                                      Removing the roadblocks	                            10
                                      •	 New development technologies
                                      •	 New manufacturing technologies
                                      •	 New distribution technologies
                                      •	 New patient interface technologies
                                      •	 Greater collaboration

                                      Choosing among the options	                         17
                                      •	 The virtual manufacturer
                                      •	 The service innovator
                                      •	 The low-cost provider
                                      •	 The profit centre

                                      Managing the movement of information	               24
                                      Restructuring the asset base	                       25
                                      Conclusion	                                         26
                                      References	                                         28




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                            1
Introduction




        The pharmaceutical industry is experiencing major upheavals, as
        PwC* noted in earlier Pharma 2020 papers. Many companies have
        responded by trying to discover, develop and market medicines more
        efficiently, but they’ve invested relatively little effort in reconfiguring
        their manufacturing and distribution operations to date. Yet the supply
        chain is just as important; it’s the link between the laboratory and the
        marketplace.

     Unfortunately, it’s a link that frequently              We’ve identified four potential supply-
     doesn’t work very well. Most pharma                     chain options from which pharma
     companies have complex supply chains                    companies can choose. Those that focus
     that are under-utilised and inefficient.                on specialist medicines can either delegate
     Worse still, they are ill-equipped to cope              all their manufacturing and distribution
     with the sort of products that are coming               to trusted contractors or build service-
     down the pipeline. By 2020, many of the                 oriented supply chains to enhance their
     medicines the industry makes will be                    brands. Those that focus on mass-market
     specialist therapies that require totally               medicines can either become low-cost
     different manufacturing and distribution                providers or build supply chains that
     techniques from those used to produce                   generate a profit by servicing both internal
     small molecules.                                        and external customers.
     In short, the pharmaceutical supply chain               We’ll discuss the main trends dictating
     needs a radical overhaul, and we predict                the need for a new approach to the
     that it will undergo three key changes over             manufacturing and distribution of
     the next decade:                                        medicines, together with some of the
                                                             techniques and technologies that will help
     •	 It will fragment, with different models
                                                             the industry make the necessary changes,
        for different product types and patient
                                                             in more detail in the following pages. We’ll
        segments
                                                             also look at the key characteristics of each
     •	 It will become a means of market                     of the four routes we’ve identified, and the
        differentiation and source of economic               implications they carry.
        value; and
     •	 It will become a two-way street, with
        information flowing upstream to drive
        the downstream flow of products and
        services.


     *  PwC” refers to the network of member firms of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited (PwCIL), or, as
       “
       the context requires, individual member firms of the PwC network.


2	                                                                                                                    PwC
The times they are a-changin’




A supply chain is the means by which             When the ‘blockbuster’ paradigm                    Asset utilisation rates have improved.
a company transfers its products from            prevailed, this wasn’t a serious problem,          Between 2004 and 2009, overall
development to the marketplace in order          but the situation is now changing                  equipment effectiveness in packaging
to sell them and generate a profit. It           dramatically. Generic competition has              increased from 36% to 51%, for example.
includes all the organisational, operational     already dented Big Pharma’s revenues – a           Quality has also risen, with the percentage
and value-adding activities needed to            trend that will continue, as the patents on        of rejected batches falling from 1.00%
manufacture those products and get them          products with sales of more than US$267            to 0.74% over the same period. But
to the customer. So, for a pharma company,       billion expire over the next six years.3 So        average set-up times have increased from
it covers everything from new product            the economies of scale the industry leaders        79 minutes to 93 minutes, and the vast
development through to delivery to the           have traditionally enjoyed are rapidly             majority of pharma companies are still far
hospital, retail pharmacy or patient (see        diminishing.                                       from having any kind of ‘continuous flow’,
Figure 1).                                                                                          smooth production scheduling or make-to-
                                                 Many pharma companies have as a result
                                                                                                    order manufacturing. Instead of producing
Some companies have superb supply                started refining their supply chains. But
                                                                                                    on demand, they must hold large quantities
chains. Fashion retailer Zara is renowned        most of the changes they’ve introduced
                                                                                                    of inventory, which drives up their working
for the speed and agility of its supply chain,   have been short-term measures to
                                                                                                    capital and overheads.4
for example.1 Apple, Procter  Gamble,           address immediate challenges like the
Cisco Systems and Wal-Mart also rank             rationalisation of larger manufacturing
among those regarded as leading examples.2       networks as a result of acquisitions. This is
However, most pharma companies have              reflected in the progress – or, rather, lack of
supply chains that are neither flexible nor      it – they’ve made in recent years.
cost-effective.
Figure 1: The supply chain is the backbone of a pharma company


                                                         Planning and Collaboration


     New Product                 Active              Secondary                                     Wholesaler Pharmacy
                             Pharmaceutical
     Development               Ingredient           Manufacturing             Distribution                                        Patient
      Innovation             Manufacturing         and Packaging
                                                                                                    Direct-to-pharmacy

                                                               People and Skills

                                                             Information Systems


Source: PwC


Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                               3
Figure 2: Numerous forces are dictating the need for a different sort of supply chain


                                                                                  •	 More complex manufacturing and distribution processes

                                                  1    New product types          •	 Different supply chains for different product types
                                                                                  •	 Shorter product lifecycles




                                                                                  •	 Incremental launch of new medicines

                                                  2    Live licensing             •	 Ability to scale up and down very rapidly
                                                                                  •	 Step changes in the revenue curve


     Even more importantly, few, if any, pharma
     companies have supply chains capable              Increasing                 •	 Expansion into health management service
     of meeting tomorrow’s needs. Numerous
     forces – both internal and external – are    3    emphasis on
                                                       outcomes
                                                                                  •	 Leaner and more adaptable cost structure that preserves
                                                                                     gross margins at every stage of the product lifecycle
     reshaping the environment in which
     the industry operates, with profound
     consequences for the way in which it
                                                                                  •	 Blurring of the boundaries between primary and acute
     manufactures and distributes its products
                                                                                     care
                                                       New modes of
                                                  4
     (see Figure 2).
                                                                                  •	 Much wider distribution network
                                                       healthcare delivery        •	 Demand-driven manufacturing and distribution
                                                                                     processes



                                                       Growing
                                                  5
                                                                                  •	 Offerings designed for patients in emerging markets
                                                       importance of              •	 More widely dispersed and more robust supply chain
                                                       emerging markets


                                                                                  •	 Heavier regulation
                                                       Greater public
                                                  6    scrutiny
                                                                                  •	 Robust risk assessment and risk-management
                                                                                     capabilities across the extended supply chain




                                                       Environmental
                                                  7
                                                                                  •	 Sustainable eco-friendly processes
                                                       pressures                  •	 Relocation of plant to less vulnerable regions



                                                  Source: PwC




4	                                                                                                                                         PwC
New drugs and devices
                                                                                                                    Biologics are in general more susceptible
                                                                                                                    to impurities in the production
                                                                                                                    process and damage during shipping
1. New product types                                                                                                than chemical entities. Making gene-
                                                                                                                    and tissue-based therapies is even
Pharma’s portfolio is changing substantially.                 However, many of these new therapies                  more difficult. Each sample must be
Industry analysts predict that, by 2016,                      and the devices used to deliver them will             individually extracted, propagated,
bioengineered vaccines and biologics                          require more complex manufacturing and                prepared and tested before it can be
will account for 23% of the global market                     distribution processes than conventional              administered, so it must be treated as a
(measured by value), up from 17% in 2009.5                    chemical entities. Indeed, some                       separate manufacturing lot and finished
The product base will become even more                        personalised medicines and poly-pills will            at a location near the patient.
diverse, as advances in nanotechnology,                       have to be ‘finished’ at the pharmacy or
tissue re-engineering, stem cell research                     point-of-care (see sidebar, New drugs                 Many of these specialist treatments will
and other such disciplines start to yield fruit               and devices). Such challenges will not                also need novel delivery devices, since it
(see Figure 3).                                               be enough to prevent product lifecycles               is difficult to produce oral formulations
                                                              getting shorter, though; greater competition          of large molecules. Micro needles,
                                                              both from similar new products and from               magnetically targeted carriers, nano-
                                                              totally different product types will reduce           particles, polymer capsules and multi-
                                                              the period of exclusivity all but the most            layered medicated patches are likely to
                                                              personalised therapies enjoy, as it has in the        predominate, but such devices are much
                                                              case of conventional medicines.                       more complex than those that are used
                                                                                                                    today.




Figure 3: By 2020, Pharma will be making a much more diverse range of products

2010                                                            2012                                                               2015                    2020

   Fixed dose combinations
                                                                     Pharmacogenomics
    Recycling existing drugs
                                                                   First fully integrated PGx
     with greater expected
                                                                     product propositions
        health benefits


              Imaging               Therapeutic monoclonals
                                                                                  Biomarkers
    Better real time imaging for     New antibody treatments
                                                                            First wave of clinically
     diagnosis, monitoring and            for cancer and
                                                                            validated biomarkers
  treatment of multiple diseases     inflammatory disorders

                                                                                                                      Human cell therapies
                                                                            Gene-based therapies                   First stem cell therapies for
        Tissue engineering
                                                                          First gene-based therapies              diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease,
    First tissue engineering or
                                                                              for diseases such as                   Parkinson’s disease and
       xenogenic therapies
                                                                         oncology and cardiovascular                     vascular injuries

                                                                                            Nano-carriers
                                    Nano-pills
                                                                                        Targeted drug delivery
                          Oral imaging diagnostics
                                                                                       systems for Alzheimer’s
                        ‘pills’ for gastrointestinal and                                 disease, Parkinson’s
                                other conditions                                    disease, cancer and strokes

KEY
Mainstream technologies already happening        Gene/Cell/Tissue technologies   Nanotech-related technologies


Source: PwC




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                                               5
2. Live licensing
     The launch process will also become                Once this happens, the ‘big bang’ launch
     much more incremental, as new methods              will give way to a phased approach in
     for assessing, approving and monitoring            which demand for a new product rises
     medicines emerge. At present, the                  as the licence is extended. The interval
     marketing applications for most new                between the initial launch and peak
     medicines are either approved or rejected;         sales point will thus be much longer; the
     the supply chains for manufacturing and            revenue curve will climb more slowly; and
     distributing them are designed to support          the payback period for capital expenditure
     peak sales volumes; and the revenues they          on plant and equipment will be more
     generate climb in a relatively simple curve.       protracted (see Figure 4). So, rather than
                                                        making a large upfront investment in a
     But the binary system of authorising new
                                                        supply chain designed to cope with peak
     medicines is becoming more graduated.
                                                        volumes, any company launching a new
     The European Medicines Agency (EMA)
                                                        medicine will need to build a supply chain
     and US Food and Drug Administration
                                                        that can be rapidly adjusted as the licence
     (FDA) introduced conditional approvals
                                                        alters.
     for certain products some years ago.6
     Both agencies are also placing much more
     emphasis on post-marketing surveillance,
     and we believe that the current system
     will eventually be replaced by a system
     in which new therapies are granted ‘live
     licences’ contingent on further testing
     to confirm their safety and efficacy in
     different patient populations.7




                                                        Figure 4: The revenue curve will climb more slowly, when ‘live licences’ replace
     Option 1
                                                        the binary system of approving new products
     Build one facility to accommodate peak sales
     Advantages:
     •	 Low scale-up risks.
                                                                  Peak Sales
     •	 Big site drives operational efficiencies.
     Disadvantages:
     •	 Large capital outlay for un-proven demand.                Understanding the
                                                                                                      40%
                                                                                          80%
                                                        Revenue




     •	 Low utilisation during growth of the product.             cost of capital and
                                                                  impact on margins is
     Option 2                                                     critical to managing
                                                                  product profitability
     Adopt a modular manufacturing platform
     scaling up to support each volume plateau
     Advantages:
     •	 Capex linked to known market demands.                                                                                     Time
     •	 High site utilisation.
     Disadvantages:
     •	 Cost and risk of commissioning more sites.
     •	 Many small sites increases cost base.
                                                        Source: PwC




6	                                                                                                                                    PwC
3. The increasing emphasis on outcomes
Financially stretched governments and        The ability to provide demonstrable value
health insurers are simultaneously           for money will thus become a critical
becoming much more demanding;                differentiating factor, and the supply chain
they now want clear evidence that the        will play a key part in providing that value
medicines they buy are really effective.     by commissioning and supervising aspects
This has huge implications for Pharma.       of the services patients need to manage
The industry will not only have to manage    their health.
the manufacturing and distribution of
medicines and companion diagnostics, it
will also have to ensure that patients get
the most from the therapies they receive
by supplementing its products with a wide
range of supporting services.




                                             4. New modes of healthcare delivery
                                             The drive to cut costs and improve outcomes    The digitalisation of healthcare delivery,
                                             underlies several other changes taking         with greater use of electronic health
                                             place in healthcare delivery, with equally     records, e-prescribing and remote
                                             momentous consequences for the industry.       monitoring, will reinforce the drive to
                                             Most of the OECD countries have been           push healthcare into the community.
                                             trying to reduce reliance on hospitals         However, it will also provide Pharma with
                                             and specialists since the 1980s.8 Self-        one of the key components needed to
                                             administration of medicines is also on the     make the transition. E-prescriptions are
                                             rise, as patients are encouraged to take a     effectively point-of-sale data. Access to
                                             more active role in managing their own care.   this data will enable pharma companies
                                             Both these trends will continue as clinical    to build demand-driven supply chains in
                                             advances provide better medicines for          which healthcare packages for different
                                             acute conditions and patients become more      patients are assembled at ‘super hubs’
                                             empowered. Many diseases which must at         before being delivered to their homes.
                                             present be treated in hospital will then be    By 2020, information about patients and
                                             treated at home.                               the medicines they need will thus be as
                                                                                            important as the products themselves.
                                             But migrating from a system in which care
                                             is provided in a relatively small number of
                                             hospitals, clinics and surgeries to one in
                                             which care is provided through a diffuse
                                             network of nurses and community carers
                                             has enormous ramifications. Pharma will
                                             need to distribute its products to many
                                             more locations, including patients’ homes.
                                             It will therefore have to harness the most
                                             efficient ‘final mile’ distribution networks
                                             in order to deliver medicines to the door as
                                             economically as possible.




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                      7
Designs for the developing
                                                                                                    economies
                                                                                                    Several medical device companies are
                                                                                                    already designing and manufacturing
     5. The growing importance of the
                                                                                                   products specifically for people living
                                                                                                    in the developing economies. Freeplay
        emerging markets                                                                            Energy has, for example, developed
                                                                                                    foetal heart rate monitors and pulse
     The growing importance of the emerging         If Pharma is to market its products             oximeters that are driven by human
     markets will accentuate these challenges.      effectively in the developing economies,        power and designed to cope with
     Although patients in the developing            it will have to understand the needs of         harsh conditions. Mindray Medical
     economies are becoming more prosperous,        patients living in these countries and          International, one of China’s biggest
     they typically pay more than half the cost     tailor its offerings accordingly; and it can    medical equipment manufacturers,
     of their medicines themselves – and few        learn from the medical device industry in       also specialises in making inexpensive
     can afford to pay as much as patients in the   this regard (see sidebar, Designs for the       patient monitoring and life support
     mature economies.9 Moreover, the choices       developing economies).10 It will also           devices. And cardiologists at India’s
     they make are often based on different         have to build a supply chain that is both       Care Hospitals have designed cheap
     values from those that influence the           more geographically dispersed and more          heart valve replacements, minimising
     design of products and services intended       secure. The number of recorded cases of         the number of disposable parts to keep
     for consumption in the developed world.        counterfeit, stolen or illegally diverted       costs down. Pharma can learn from
     Cost and the ability to buy on a daily or      medicines has already soared nearly nine-       such role models. It can, for instance,
     weekly basis are more important than           fold since 2002.11                              develop economical formulations and
     convenience, for example.                                                                      stripped-down services for patients
                                                                                                    who can’t afford its most expensive
                                                                                                    offerings.




                                                    6. Greater public scrutiny
                                                    In fact, by 2020, the ability to manage risk   Other administrations are also tightening
                                                    and compliance throughout the supply           the rules. The Indian government
                                                    chain will be more crucial than ever before.   recently passed a law mandating the use
                                                    While globalisation is increasing the          of track-and-trace barcodes on all drugs
                                                    risks, greater public awareness and more       meant for export, with effect from July
                                                    diligent enforcement are raising the bar.      2011, following reports that Chinese
                                                    In 2009, for example, the FDA recalled a       counterfeiters were selling fake medicines
                                                    record 1,742 medicines. A single company       labelled ‘Made in India’ in several African
                                                    accounted for more than 1,000 recalls but,     countries.14
                                                    even when these are stripped out of the
                                                    picture, the number of recalls still rose by
                                                    50% year on year.12




8	                                                                                                                                        PwC
Water is the new gold
                                                                                               About 20% of people live in countries
                                                                                               that don’t have enough fresh water, but
                                                                                               the situation will get much worse over
                                                                                               the next decade. The global population
                                                                                               is projected to rise from 6.8 billion
                                                                                               to 7.6 billion by 2020. The amount
7. Environmental pressures                                                                     of food needed to sustain mankind is
                                                                                               thus increasing – and farming already
The Green agenda presents other               Indeed, some companies may have to               accounts for about 70% of the world’s
difficulties. All pharma companies already    relocate some of their production facilities     total fresh water consumption. Rapid
operate under strict environmental            to completely different places. Global           urbanisation is also driving up demand
controls, for obvious reasons. But these      warming is changing the world’s weather          for safe drinking water and sanitation
regulations are likely to become even         patterns and many of the traditional             facilities, and environmental changes
tougher, given the international drive to     centres of pharmaceutical manufacturing,         like deforestation and global warming
curb carbon emissions. Taxes on water         such as Singapore, lie in regions that           are exacerbating these pressures.
consumption are also likely to rise, as       will become more vulnerable to extreme
                                                                                               Water shortages will have a serious
population growth, increased farming,         weather events. Even if it proves possible to
                                                                                               impact everywhere. The United
rapid urbanisation and climate change         engineer a better climate – e.g., by locking
                                                                                               Nations predicts that, by 2025, 1.8
exacerbate the shortage of fresh water (see   up the ice caps or using plants to suck up
                                                                                               billion people will be living in regions
sidebar, Water is the new gold).15            excess carbon dioxide – geoengineering
                                                                                               where water is very scarce, while
                                              experts widely agree that the effects
However, many of the assets pharma                                                             5 billion could be living in ‘water
                                              would be limited. Such measures would,
companies own are designed to support                                                          stress’ conditions. The problem will
                                              at best, reduce peak temperatures during
specific manufacturing processes                                                               be particularly acute in China, India,
                                              the transition to a low-carbon world.16
– processes that typically consume                                                             sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and
                                              But relocating a plant to a new country or
considerable amounts of energy and                                                             some parts of Latin America. But even
                                              region is a complex business; numerous
water. If the industry is to reduce its                                                        countries in more temperate zones
                                              political, financial and commercial factors
environmental footprint, it will have to                                                       will suffer. One recent study suggests,
                                              must be looked at, as we indicated in
adopt new, more eco-friendly processes                                                         for example, that large swathes of the
                                              “Pharma 2020: Taxing times ahead.”17
and that will require a substantial                                                            south-western US will be at risk of
investment in new equipment.                                                                   water shortages by mid-century.




                                              The collective impact of these trends
                                              To sum up, the current model for                The change in the industry’s remit has even
                                              manufacturing and distributing medicines        more fundamental implications. Pharma
                                              isn’t fit for Pharma’s future needs, as many    companies will have to manage a vast
                                              industry executives recognise. The high         network of service providers, as well as
                                              margins that made it feasible to tie up         manufacturing and distributing their own
                                              capital in large stocks of raw materials and    products. They will also have to acquire a
                                              finished goods are ending. Most companies       much deeper understanding of patients.
                                              also have asset bases that are ill-suited       In a world where outcomes count for
                                              to produce the sort of therapies that are       everything, it’s not molecules that create
                                              now in the pipeline or to cope with new         value but, rather, the ability to integrate
                                              environmental regulations, so they’ll have      data, products and services in a coherent
                                              to sell or re-engineer much of their existing   business offering. Understanding this
                                              plant.                                          shift of emphasis from products to patient
                                                                                              outcomes is critical; those firms that can
                                                                                              develop and supply integrated product-
                                                                                              service packages will be able to deliver
                                                                                              significant benefits to every stakeholder in
                                                                                              the healthcare value chain.




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                          9
Removing the roadblocks




  Timely access to various emerging
  technologies will help Pharma manufacture
  and distribute its products more efficiently.
  Some of these technologies will enable
  it to build quality into its manufacturing
  processes, while others will enhance its
  throughput or facilitate collaboration to
  realise economies of scale (see Figure 5).


  Figure 5: Significant opportunities for improving the supply chain exist

                                               ‘Assembly line’ production                    Distribution                     E-prescribing (POS                         ‘Self service’ (the patient
            Formulations that are              (disposable components, Quality by            structure and   Flexible         data for supply                            as an integral component
            easier to manufacture              Design  PAT) and continuous manufacturing    technology      production       chain planning)                            of the supply chain)




                                                                       Planning and Collaboration
                                                                                                                                                     Sales  Marketing
              Patient




                                                                                                                                                                                   Patient




                                             Raw                                  Secondary/
                         RD




                                          Materials/             API              Packaging            Distribution              Service
                                        Intermediates



                                                                         People and Skills

                                                                       Information Systems


      Computer modelling                    Flexible       Dynamic sourcing,                 Aligned           New ‘patient          Internal and
      (virtual process development,         production     micro-processing                  performance       interface’            external
      facility design and validation,                      technologies and                  management        technologies          collaboration
      Quality by Design)                                   numbering up



  Source: PwC




10	                                                                                                                                                                                           PwC
Biologics in a bottle
                                                                                                        One of the main obstacles in
                                                                                                        developing oral biologics is the
                                                                                                        fact that proteins break down in
                                                                                                        the gastrointestinal tract and cease
                                                                                                        to be active. Some proteins also
                                                                                                        have a very narrow therapeutic
1. New development technologies                                                                         index and must be delivered in
                                                                                                        doses too precise to be orally
Formulations that are easier to manufacture                                                             administered. Nevertheless,
                                                                                                        numerous companies are trying to
During the past 60 years, audio technology       Researchers are also working on the ‘holy              create pill-based proteins.
has evolved from the vinyl record to the         grail’ of oral biologics, and industry experts
iPod, but the way in which medicines             believe it will eventually be possible to              Bangalore-based Biocon is testing
are delivered has stayed much the same.          produce stable, pill-based versions of                 an insulin pill in the US and India,
Compressed tablets containing a mixture          some proteins (see sidebar, Biologics in a             for example, with promising
of active ingredients and excipients are still   bottle).18                                             preliminary results. Meanwhile,
the most common dosage form.                                                                            Novo Nordisk is conducting a
                                                 Using formulations that can be more                    Phase I study of an oral insulin
However, more sophisticated drug delivery        easily manufactured will enable Pharma                 pill formulated using Merrion
techniques will provide the means with           to minimise its investment in product and              Pharmaceuticals’ gastrointestinal
which to create formulations that are easier     process development until the later stages             permeation enhancement
to manufacture – e.g., powder in vials and       of the product development lifecycle, when             technology. Several oral biologics
liquid droplets on blank tablets.                it’s easier to estimate the potential value of         for the treatment of autoimmune
                                                 new products. And the development of oral              diseases are also in the pipeline,
                                                 biologics will eliminate the need for cold-            including a new class of drugs
                                                 chain distribution of such therapies.                  called JAK inhibitors. One such
                                                                                                        instance is tasocitinib, which was
                                                                                                        developed by Pfizer and is now in
                                                                                                        Phase III trials.




                                                 Virtual process design and validation
                                                 Meanwhile, computational modelling               The conventional process of scaling up will
                                                 will enable Pharma to design and validate        also be replaced by ‘numbering up’ – i.e.,
                                                 manufacturing processes virtually, using         using microreactors in parallel arrays.
                                                 Quality by Design (QbD) principles. In-line      Numbering up has several significant
                                                 process monitoring via process analytical        advantages over traditional techniques.
                                                 technologies (PAT) will generate the data        It dispenses with the need for costly and
                                                 needed to validate these models and secure       time-consuming studies to devise a process
                                                 regulatory approval.                             for scaling up chemical reactions, since
                                                                                                  the process that was used to produce a few
                                                 The FDA has already published a draft
                                                                                                  grams of product in the laboratory is the
                                                 guidance in which it proposes replacing
                                                                                                  same one that is used to synthesise larger
                                                 ‘three-batch validation’ with a three-stage
                                                                                                  quantities. In addition, using microreactors
                                                 methodology that involves designing a
                                                                                                  makes it much easier to control key
                                                 suitable process, using the knowledge
                                                                                                  parameters and thus improve yields.
                                                 gained in development and scale-up;
                                                 ensuring the process is capable of
                                                 reproducibly manufacturing commercial
                                                 batches; and validating it continuously
                                                 during routine production.19 By 2020, this
                                                 approach is likely to be the norm.




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                              11
2. New manufacturing technologies
  Flexible production
  Virtual engineering will not only accelerate   Collectively, these improvements will allow
  the validation of new processes, it will       pharma companies to create different
  facilitate the rapid reconfiguration of        supply chains for different product types
  existing manufacturing lines for different     and markets, manage sudden shifts
  products. With flexible processes and          in demand such as the step changes
  miniaturised, modular components that          associated with live licensing and reduce
  can be quickly connected or disconnected       their manufacturing costs. They should
  like pieces of ‘Lego’, it will be relatively   simultaneously help the industry fulfil
  easy to alter the order in which specific      its social responsibilities, including the
  unit operations are performed. Widespread      need both to pioneer more sustainable
  use of disposable technologies will            manufacturing processes and to produce
  likewise reduce changeover times (and the      medicines the entire world can afford.
  consumption of clean water).

                                                 Continuous processing and automation
                                                 By 2020, most medicines will also be           Micro-containers with embedded
                                                 manufactured continuously. Process             superparamagnetic nano-particles can be
                                                 tomography and other such technologies         treated with an alternating magnetic field
                                                 will enable companies to capture real-time     to release materials encapsulated in bubbles
                                                 data on critical processes, develop complex    within the material and thus converted into
                                                 multivariate models and automatically          micro-reactors for the efficient production
                                                 compensate for unexpected process              of thousands of individual doses of tailored
                                                 disturbances. Process data generated           biological products.20
                                                 during the development phase will be
                                                                                                Micro-processing will even make it possible
                                                 used to ‘teach’ process control systems
                                                                                                to formulate some medicines and poly-pills
                                                 to respond to process disturbances even
                                                                                                at the point at which they are dispensed.
                                                 before commercial manufacturing begins.
                                                                                                Several companies have already started
                                                 Meanwhile, advances in colloidal and foam      providing pharmaceutical compounding
                                                 systems will facilitate the micro-processing   services, one such instance being Fagron, a
                                                 of active pharmaceutical ingredients           subsidiary of the Belgian Arseus.21 But, by
                                                 (APIs).                                        2020, the pharmacist will be able to ‘mix’
                                                                                                medicines individually on the premises,
                                                                                                using validated formulation equipment –
                                                                                                much as DIY stores mix paints to produce
                                                                                                customised colours.




12	                                                                                                                                    PwC
Transgenic production
Simulation and automation aren’t the only      Other examples include the Netherlands-
tools to hand; transgenic engineering offers   based Pharming, which uses transgenic
a fundamentally different way of producing     rabbits to make the C1 inhibitor protein.23
many therapeutic proteins. The process
                                               Transgenic production has several
involves inserting foreign genes into host
                                               significant advantages over more
animals or plants so that they express
                                               traditional methods for producing
proteins they wouldn’t otherwise express
                                               therapeutic proteins, such as mammalian
and then using them to ‘manufacture’ large
                                               cell culture and bacterial systems.
quantities of these proteins.
                                               It requires substantially less capital
GTC Biotherapeutics has already                expenditure, is easy to scale up or down
demonstrated the commercial viability          in line with demand (by increasing or
of transgenic production techniques with       decreasing the size of the herd) and can
its recombinant human antithrombin             be undertaken in rural environments
ATryn, which is extracted from the milk of     where the infrastructure for more high-
genetically modified goats.22                  tech manufacturing techniques may not be
                                               available.




                                               3. New distribution                           Fingering the fakes
                                               technologies                                  Various new tracking technologies
                                                                                             are in the works. One such
                                               Just as new technologies are emerging         example is the ‘bokode’ – a
                                               to help pharma companies manufacture          kind of data tag that can hold
                                               a wider and more complex range of             far more information than a
                                               medicines, so new technologies are            conventional barcode and be read
                                               emerging to help them distribute those        from much further away. DNA
                                               medicines. Cloud computing will provide       labelling could also provide a way
                                               the information platforms they need to        of fingerprinting proteins and
                                               share data securely and economically          determining where they have been
                                               with suppliers around the world, analyse      manufactured, if the problems
                                               the data very rapidly and respond to          with selecting a DNA fraction
                                               sudden changes in supply and demand,          that doesn’t affect a protein’s
                                               while advanced tracking technologies          performance can be overcome.
                                               will enable them to monitor products          DNA fingerprinting has already
                                               from the factory gate to the patient – an     been used to identify ‘counterfeit’
                                               increasingly important feature, as the        foods; researchers in Spain
                                               industry manufactures more biologics with     recently used a technique called
                                               high unit values and specialist delivery      forensically informative nucleotide
                                               requirements (see sidebar, Fingering the      sequencing to test nine commercial
                                               fakes).24                                     seafood samples containing shark
                                                                                             meat and isolate those that were
                                                                                             incorrectly labelled.




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                13
Tablets go high-tech
                                                                                                                    Proteus Biomedical has developed
                                                                                                                    a miniature digestible chip which
                                                                                                                    can be attached to a conventional
                                                                                                                    medicine and used to monitor
                                                                                                                    patient compliance. The chip sends
                                                                                                                    a signal to a sensing device worn
  4. New patient interface technologies                                                                             on the skin, which records the time
                                                                                                                    and date at which the medicine has
  New ‘patient interface’ technologies are                  By 2020, there will be many such patient                been ingested as well as measuring
  likewise being developed, some of which                   interface technologies on the market                    certain vital signs. The information
  will bring pharma companies closer to                     and the information they generate will                  is then forwarded, via wireless
  patients than ever before. One instance is                help patients manage their health more                  technology, to the patient’s doctor.
  the prototype chip and receiver devised by                effectively, as well as allowing healthcare             Novartis has previously tested
  Proteus Biomedical, which records exactly                 providers to monitor their compliance                   the chip on 20 patients who are
  when a tablet is metabolised (see sidebar,                in real time. But they will also provide                taking its blood pressure treatment
  Tablets go high-tech).25                                  pharma companies with information                       Diovan, with impressive results; the
                                                            they can use both to design more robust                 company reported that compliance
                                                            products and services, and to develop more              could be improved from 30% to
                                                            accurate production and distribution plans.             80% in six months.




                                                           5. Greater collaboration
                                                            Technology isn’t the only answer to              At present, there are three distinct supply
                                                            Pharma’s problems, though; greater               chains for designing, manufacturing and
                                                            collaboration with the other parties             distributing pharmaceuticals; designing,
                                                            involved in healthcare provision will also       manufacturing and distributing medical
                                                            help the industry become more efficient.         devices; and providing healthcare
                                                                                                             services (including laboratory work and
                                                                                                             pathology). Integrating these supply chains
                                                                                                             so that all the upstream and downstream
                                                                                                             partners can see the full picture would
                                                                                                             enable them to plan ahead more accurately
                                                                                                             and manage demand more cost-effectively
                                                                                                             (see Figure 6).


  Figure 6: By 2020, the pharmaceuticals, medical devices and healthcare services supply chains will be fully integrated
                                      Current Situation                                                        Situation in 2020
                               Pharmaceutical Supply Chain                                                     Integrated Supply Chain
                                                                                               Pharmaceuticals + Medical Devices + Healthcare Services
        Pharma                 Intermediate       Hospitals 
                                warehouse         Pharmacies          Patient
                                                                                                         Intermediate        Hospitals 
                                                                                         Pharma           warehouse          Pharmacies

                              Medical Devices Supply Chain                                               Intermediate
                                                                                      Manufacturers      warehouses or       Hospitals 
                               Intermediate                                                                                  Pharmacies
                               warehouse or       Hospitals          Patient                             wholesalers
      Manufacturers                               Pharmacies
                                 wholesaler                                                                                                       Patient
                                                                                       Primary care
                                                                                        (Doctor or
                            Healthcare Services Supply Chain                             Hospital)

                  Primary care (Doctor or hospital)                                   Secondary care
                                                                      Patient           (Hospital or
          Secondary care (Hospital or community care)                                 community care)

        Areas of full supply chain visibility


  Source: PwC


14	                                                                                                                                                         PwC
Creating an integrated healthcare products    With access to each roadmap for each
and services supply chain would not be        illness, and data on the incidence of
easy. But one of the main tools used to       each illness in a given population,
manage healthcare quality could prove         pharma companies and medical device
invaluable here. Healthcare providers in      manufacturers will be able to predict
many parts of the world are developing        demand for their products much more
defined care pathways to standardise          accurately. They will also be able to
the treatment of patients with the same       define a supply pathway for each product,
illnesses and thus improve outcomes. This     depending on whether it’s a one-off
will ultimately result in the creation of     treatment (such as a prophylactic vaccine,
defined healthcare packages for each care     gene therapy or anti-infective) or a
pathway.                                      recurring treatment for a chronic condition,
                                              which must be supplied on an ongoing basis
                                              (see Figure 7).

Figure 7: The development of care pathways will provide greater supply chain
predictability

                                                              Structured Interventions
                                                                Defined Care Pathway
                                                                      Healthcare
                                          Tests/                       package
                    Doctor              Diagnosis
                                                                         Drug

                                                                        Device
                                        Outcome
  Unwell                                                               Physician
                                       Chronic Care
                                                                      Labs/Assay
                   Healthy              Prevention
                                                                 Compliance/Outcome
                                             Cure


Source: PwC
                                              There is potential for collaboration in other   Some companies may choose to establish
                                              ways, too. Most pharma companies at             joint ventures, while others turn to third
                                              the moment manufacture and distribute           parties. Abbott Laboratories and Boehringer
                                              their own products, for example, but this       Ingelheim already manufacture for other
                                              reduces asset utilisation rates and drives      organisations, for example.26 And the
                                              up distribution costs, as well as causing       contract manufacturing sector is expanding
                                              unnecessary environmental damage.               very rapidly. In fact, market research firm
                                              Conversely, sharing manufacturing and           BCC Research estimates that the bulk- and
                                              distribution resources would be much more       dosage-form drugs segment will be worth
                                              economical. A few pharma companies              about $73 billion by 2014, more than double
                                              have started experimenting with ‘shared         the $36 billion it was worth in 2007.27
                                              services’, primarily to support joint product
                                              development initiatives. However, the
                                              vast majority of companies still build,
                                              own and operate their own supply chain
                                              infrastructure.




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                         15
Collaborating to cut the
                                                                                                kilometres
                                                                                                In September 2009, confectionery
                                                                                                giants Nestlé and Mars joined
                                                                                                forces with a leading British
                                                                                                supermarket chain to synchronise
                                                                                                deliveries of their products over
                                                                                                the busy Christmas period and
                                                                                                reduce their environmental
                                                                                                footprint. The two manufacturers
                                                                                                worked closely together to
                                                                                                coordinate their deliveries to
  Experience in other industries has also        Moreover, some of the most sophisticated       three regional distribution centres
  demonstrated the benefits of managing          third-party logistics (3PL) providers          so that any part load order that
  distribution collectively (see sidebar,        – i.e., companies that offer freight           either company received could
  Collaborating to cut the kilometres).28        management and warehousing – are               be combined in one truck load.
  And increasing demand for biologics has        expanding into supply chain management         By dint of collaborating, they
  stimulated the development of specialist       and coordination services. And it is           eliminated over 12,000 kilometres
  logistics providers capable of handling very   arguably these fourth-party logistics          of duplicate journeys.
  sensitive pharmaceutical freight. Many         (4PL) providers, as they are known, that
  provide specialised service where each         can deliver the greatest improvements.
  shipment is transported in temperature         When telecommunications equipment
  – and humidity – controlled conditions,        manufacturer Alcatel turned to a 4PL to
  monitored from a dedicated call centre         manage the supply chain for its e-business
  using web-based tracking and reporting,        networking division, for example, its
  and delivered directly to the customer’s       supply chain costs fell from 5.8% to 5.1%
  door.29                                        of revenues within two years in that
                                                 division.30
                                                 In other words, the contract manufacturing
                                                 and logistics industries are both maturing
                                                 and, by 2020, some of the biggest providers
                                                 will offer integrated supply chain services.
                                                 This will enable pharma companies to share
                                                 resources and capitalise on economies of
                                                 scale throughout the value chain.




16	                                                                                                                              PwC
Choosing among the options




                                      There are two options for companies              Companies that concentrate on mass-
   We’ve discussed why the vast       focusing on specialist therapies and             market medicines, including generics and
   majority of pharma companies       treatments for orphan diseases, and two          over-the-counter (OTC) products, can
                                      options for companies focusing on mass-          either become low-cost manufacturers
   will have to build supply chains
                                      market medicines. We believe that most           or build supply chains that service other
   with new manufacturing,            companies will fall into one of these two        organisations and create a profit in their
   distribution and service-          categories by 2020, although the very            own right (see Figure 8).
   management techniques, and         largest companies may cover both ends
                                                                                       Companies with a broad range of products
   some of the developments that      of the spectrum. But they will still have
                                                                                       that present different characteristics and
   can help them. But what route      to develop different supply chains for
                                                                                       therefore supply chain needs, will in the
                                      different product types.
   should they take?                                                                   future need to segment their supply chain
                                      More specifically, companies that                operation, aligning to the unique demands
                                      concentrate on specialist therapies can          of the product group. Pharma companies
                                      either exit from manufacturing and               that operate more than one supply chain
                                      operate virtual supply chains or become          option will increase with the breadth and
                                      service innovators.                              demand of the portfolio.


                                      Figure 8: Four options exist for restructuring the pharmaceutical supply chain

                                                                      Operations Strategy
                                                Specialist Therapies                           Mass-Market Medicines
                                           Virtual                  Service                 Low-Cost                   Profit
                                         Manufacturer              Innovator                 Provider                  Centre
                                       Create a virtual        Build a service-        Build a reliable, ‘no-   Combine agile,
                                       network of integrated   oriented supply chain   frills’ supply chain     economic
                                       supply partners         to enhance brands       to deliver products      manufacturing and
                                                               and differentiate       as economically as       distribution with the
                                                               company from its        possible                 provision of satellite
                                                               competitors                                      services to generate
                                                                                                                profits

                                      Source: PwC




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                      17
Recommendations
  for becoming
  a virtual
  manufacturer
  Our experience suggests that there are
  several key steps a would-be virtual
  manufacturer should take. It should start
  by defining what it is and does, including its
  business strategy, aspirations and corporate     1. The virtual manufacturer
  culture. Then it should identify the financial   The first option for companies making         However, despite these advantages, no
  and technical demands its portfolio              specialist therapies is to outsource the      Big Pharma company has virtualised its
  presents, and how those demands are likely       entire supply chain from production           whole network yet. Concerns about the
  to change over time. Once it’s looked in the     of the earliest clinical batches to           calibre of the contract manufacturing
  mirror and analysed its requirements, it can     full-scale manufacturing, packaging           sector, supply integrity, quality and
  crunch the numbers, with a detailed study        and distribution, and become virtual          compliance persist. In one recent survey,
  of its internal capabilities, product flows      manufacturers. This is very different         for example, 91% of the firms that relied
  and costs, and compare its own capabilities      from engaging in the sort of tactical         on outsourcing reported experiencing a
  and costs with those of potential suppliers.     outsourcing most pharma companies             ‘significant incident’ as a result of quality
  Any company planning to become a virtual         now employ currently. Becoming a              problems or delays, compared with only
  manufacturer should also hire good               virtual manufacturer isn’t a short-term       59% of those that performed most of
  negotiators, because it’s the deal – not the     fix to address cash, capacity or capability   their manufacturing in-house.32
  science – that will ultimately determine         constraints but, rather, a deliberate
                                                                                                 The consolidation of the contract
  whether it succeeds. So it needs people who      strategy. And executing that strategy
                                                                                                 manufacturing sector will alleviate some
  can forge strong commercial contracts. And       successfully involves building a network
                                                                                                 of these difficulties. A small cadre of
  it should make sure it retains enough know-      of fully integrated supply partners.
                                                                                                 global players will replace the multitude
  how both to evaluate its suppliers properly      A number of small firms have already          of local providers that currently exist.
  and to track their performance, including        taken the virtual route, but several large    The evolution of the logistics industry
  any changes in the materials suppliers           companies have recently announced             will likewise result in the emergence
  and processes they use and any problems          plans to outsource a bigger share of their    of strong 4PLs capable of distributing
  maintaining quality control or yield rates.      manufacturing. AstraZeneca intends            healthcare packages directly to patients
  After that, the company can concentrate on       to outsource all its API production           or their healthcare providers efficiently
  choosing the contractors it wants to work        over the next five to seven years, for        and economically. But any company that
  with, and here the secret is to be selective.    example, while Bristol-Myers Squibb,          decides to operate a virtual supply chain
  Focusing on a small set of contractors and       GlaxoSmithKline, Merck and Pfizer aim         will still have to maintain sufficient
  working closely with them during the             to outsource as much as 40% of their          in-house expertise to choose the right
  tender process ensures they have a clear         API needs.31                                  partners and monitor them constantly.
  grasp of the company’s business, and the                                                       Baxter has first-hand experience of a
                                                   The business case for virtualisation is
  complexities of the products or processes                                                      serious breach in the integrity of its
                                                   clear. It enables a company to shift to
  that are being outsourced. But it’s also                                                       supply chain, for example. In February
                                                   a flexible cost base, reduce the risks
  essential to maintain a close relationship                                                     2008, two Chinese plants were found
                                                   associated with investing in new assets
  with those suppliers after they’ve been                                                        responsible for producing contaminated
                                                   and access new technologies and skills.
  appointed. Lifecycle management of                                                             supplies of chondroitin sulphate, the
                                                   It also helps it align its supply chain
  contracts is crucial in realising value and                                                    raw material used to make its blood
                                                   network with its demand forecasts,
  minimising contract ‘leakage’ through off-                                                     thinner Heparin, and Baxter is now
                                                   transfer the risk of primary and back-
  contract buying or poorly aligned service                                                      facing a spate of law suits.33
                                                   up supply to a third party and drive
  levels.                                          costs down by switching products and
                                                   processes between competing suppliers
                                                   in its network.




18	                                                                                                                                     PwC
In order to manage the risks associated
                                                   Figure 9: Most pharma companies struggle to get supply chain data
with collaboration, virtual manufacturers
                                                   promptly from critical suppliers, distributors and other company sites
will need to ensure they have access to real-
time data from every stakeholder in their                                                          19%
supply chains. At present, most pharma                                                                                                                 49%
                                                       Critical
companies rely on periodic audits, but               Suppliers                                                  27%
these only produce snapshots in time. And                                    6%
most companies can’t get vital supply-chain
data very rapidly. In one recent study, only                                          11%
a small percentage of respondents said                                                                                                  40%
they could get information from critical           Distributors
                                                                                                                                  37%
suppliers and distributors within two                                                   13%
hours. Indeed, a number struggled to get
the information within three days (see                                                                            28%
Figure 9).34                                           Other                                                                                  43%
                                                    Company
Some of these difficulties can be resolved by          Sites                                     18%
using interoperable systems and common                                                11%
practices, requiring suppliers to provide
a complete history for every batch of raw                            Within 2 hours    Within 1 business day   Within 3 business days    After 3 business days
materials or components they produce and
replacing periodic audits with constant            Source: Axendia
surveillance. But any company that takes the
virtual manufacturing route will also have
to encourage its suppliers to collaborate
in developing a better understanding of
key parameters and implementing process
controls to produce greater supply chain
visibility. In effect, it will need to treat its
suppliers as extensions of itself, rather than
as separate manufacturing and distribution
islands.




Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 	                                                                                                                              19
Recommendations
  for becoming a
  service innovator
  Becoming a service innovator entails
  developing an intimate understanding
  of patients, by linking up with patient
  groups, participating in online patient
  communities and social networks (e.g.,
  PatientsLikeMe) and giving patients a
  forum in which to provide feedback. Any         2. The service innovator
  company that wants to take the service          Alternatively, companies making               It will also have to restructure its asset
  innovation route should also analyse the        specialist therapies can become service       base and invest in new capabilities, both
  care pathway for every disease for which        innovators – i.e., build supply chains that   internal and external. It will have to build
  it has medicines, including the clinical        are capable both of manufacturing and         a supply chain that’s sufficiently mature
  and economic implications of different          distributing complex treatments, and of       to manage a vast network of suppliers and
  forms of intervention, since diet, exercise,    commissioning and managing a multitude        yet sufficiently nimble to respond rapidly
  compliance support and counselling also         of suppliers to provide supporting health     to the demands of numerous different
  play a role in managing many illnesses.         management services. German healthcare        customers. And it will have to develop
  Thereafter, the company should aim to           group Fresenius has already expanded          a new financial structure. Much of the
  get as close as possible to its customers. In   into services very successfully; it’s now     economic value it creates will depend
  other words, it should invest as much and as    the world’s leading provider of dialysis      on the activities it performs in its local
  passionately in understanding the current       machines and dialysis care.35 Other           markets, rather than the medicines that
  and future needs of healthcare providers as     companies, such as Baxter and Novo            constitute its underlying intellectual
  it’s traditionally invested in RD. It should   Nordisk, are adopting a similar approach.36   property – a change that carries huge tax
  also look for partners – be they contract                                                     implications.37
                                                  However, becoming a service innovator
  manufacturers, logistics companies,             isn’t easy. Any company that chooses this     That said, the provision of integrated
  hospitals, clinics, data analysis firms,        option will have to make major cultural       product-service packages has many
  technology suppliers or lifestyle service       changes. It will, for example, have to        advantages. It enables a company to
  providers – with a similar corporate culture    understand its role in every care pathway     differentiate its offerings, reach new
  and ethos.                                      and concentrate on helping patients           markets and create new sources of revenue.
  The next step is to start building networks     manage the disease lifecycle, as distinct     It also creates opportunities to enhance
  for patients with different diseases.           from trying to stimulate demand for its       the customer relationship and improve
  That’s partly a process of negotiation; the     products. And it will have to look at the     customer loyalty, because services are
  participants in each network will need to       supply chain through the eyes of the          more dependent on skill and more difficult
  agree on their goals, as well as defining       patient as the ultimate customer.             to imitate than products.
  what they’ll do to realise those goals
  and how they’ll be rewarded for their
  efforts. But it’s also essential to create a
  common supporting infrastructure, robust
  performance indicators, proper governance
  structure and clear audit trail.
  And it’s important not to underestimate the
  cultural adjustment that’s needed. The task
  of the service provider is to commission
  and manage a huge network of contractors
  around the globe, and ensure they
  provide a truly integrated product-service
  offering. That’s a very different job from
  manufacturing and distributing its own
  products.




20	                                                                                                                                PwC
Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future
Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future
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Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future
Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future
Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future
Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future
Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future
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Pharma 2020-supplying-the-future

  • 1. www.pwc.com/pharma2020 Pharma 2020: Supplying the future Which path will you take? Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences
  • 2. Previous publications in this series include: Pharmaceuticals Published in June 2007, this Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences Fourth in the Pharma 2020 paper highlights a number of series and published in April issues that will have a major 2009, this report highlights bearing on the industry by how Pharma’s fully integrated Pharma 2020: The vision Pharma 2020: Challenging business models Which path will you take?* 2020. The publication outlines Which path will you take? business models may not be the changes we believe will best the best option for the pharma help pharmaceutical companies industry in 2020; more creative realise the potential the future collaboration models may be holds to enhance the value they more attractive. This paper also provide to shareholders and evaluates the advantages and society alike. disadvantages of the alternative business models and how each stands up against the challenges facing the industry. *connectedthinking  Pharma 2020: The vision # Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences This report, published in June Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences The fifth report in our series, 2008, explores opportunities published in December 2009, to improve the R&D process. It focuses on the opportunities proposes that new technologies Pharma 2020: Taxing times ahead and challenges from a tax Pharma 2020: Virtual R&D Which path will you take? will enable the adoption of Which path will you take? perspective. It discusses how the virtual R&D; and by operating political, economic, scientific and in a more connected world social trends currently shaping the industry, in collaboration the commercial environment, with researchers, governments, together with the development of healthcare payers and new, more collaborative business providers, can address the models, will exert increasing changing needs of society more pressure on effective tax rates effectively. within the industry. It also shows how companies can adapt their tax strategies to support the provision of outcomes- Pharma 2020: Virtual R&D 1 based healthcare and remain Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences Published in February 2009, this competitive. paper discusses the key forces reshaping the pharmaceutical marketplace, including the Pharma 2020: Marketing the future Which path will you take? growing power of healthcare payers, providers and patients, and the changes required to create a marketing and sales model that is fit for the 21st century. These changes will enable the industry to market and sell its products more cost-effectively, to create new opportunities and to generate greater customer loyalty across the healthcare spectrum. All these publications are available to download at: www.pwc.com/pharma2020
  • 3. Table of contents Introduction 2 The times they are a-changin’ 3 • New product types • Live licensing • The increasing emphasis on outcomes • New modes of healthcare delivery • The growing importance of the emerging markets • Greater public scrutiny • Environmental pressures • The collective impact of these trends Removing the roadblocks 10 • New development technologies • New manufacturing technologies • New distribution technologies • New patient interface technologies • Greater collaboration Choosing among the options 17 • The virtual manufacturer • The service innovator • The low-cost provider • The profit centre Managing the movement of information 24 Restructuring the asset base 25 Conclusion 26 References 28 Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 1
  • 4. Introduction The pharmaceutical industry is experiencing major upheavals, as PwC* noted in earlier Pharma 2020 papers. Many companies have responded by trying to discover, develop and market medicines more efficiently, but they’ve invested relatively little effort in reconfiguring their manufacturing and distribution operations to date. Yet the supply chain is just as important; it’s the link between the laboratory and the marketplace. Unfortunately, it’s a link that frequently We’ve identified four potential supply- doesn’t work very well. Most pharma chain options from which pharma companies have complex supply chains companies can choose. Those that focus that are under-utilised and inefficient. on specialist medicines can either delegate Worse still, they are ill-equipped to cope all their manufacturing and distribution with the sort of products that are coming to trusted contractors or build service- down the pipeline. By 2020, many of the oriented supply chains to enhance their medicines the industry makes will be brands. Those that focus on mass-market specialist therapies that require totally medicines can either become low-cost different manufacturing and distribution providers or build supply chains that techniques from those used to produce generate a profit by servicing both internal small molecules. and external customers. In short, the pharmaceutical supply chain We’ll discuss the main trends dictating needs a radical overhaul, and we predict the need for a new approach to the that it will undergo three key changes over manufacturing and distribution of the next decade: medicines, together with some of the techniques and technologies that will help • It will fragment, with different models the industry make the necessary changes, for different product types and patient in more detail in the following pages. We’ll segments also look at the key characteristics of each • It will become a means of market of the four routes we’ve identified, and the differentiation and source of economic implications they carry. value; and • It will become a two-way street, with information flowing upstream to drive the downstream flow of products and services. * PwC” refers to the network of member firms of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited (PwCIL), or, as “ the context requires, individual member firms of the PwC network. 2 PwC
  • 5. The times they are a-changin’ A supply chain is the means by which When the ‘blockbuster’ paradigm Asset utilisation rates have improved. a company transfers its products from prevailed, this wasn’t a serious problem, Between 2004 and 2009, overall development to the marketplace in order but the situation is now changing equipment effectiveness in packaging to sell them and generate a profit. It dramatically. Generic competition has increased from 36% to 51%, for example. includes all the organisational, operational already dented Big Pharma’s revenues – a Quality has also risen, with the percentage and value-adding activities needed to trend that will continue, as the patents on of rejected batches falling from 1.00% manufacture those products and get them products with sales of more than US$267 to 0.74% over the same period. But to the customer. So, for a pharma company, billion expire over the next six years.3 So average set-up times have increased from it covers everything from new product the economies of scale the industry leaders 79 minutes to 93 minutes, and the vast development through to delivery to the have traditionally enjoyed are rapidly majority of pharma companies are still far hospital, retail pharmacy or patient (see diminishing. from having any kind of ‘continuous flow’, Figure 1). smooth production scheduling or make-to- Many pharma companies have as a result order manufacturing. Instead of producing Some companies have superb supply started refining their supply chains. But on demand, they must hold large quantities chains. Fashion retailer Zara is renowned most of the changes they’ve introduced of inventory, which drives up their working for the speed and agility of its supply chain, have been short-term measures to capital and overheads.4 for example.1 Apple, Procter Gamble, address immediate challenges like the Cisco Systems and Wal-Mart also rank rationalisation of larger manufacturing among those regarded as leading examples.2 networks as a result of acquisitions. This is However, most pharma companies have reflected in the progress – or, rather, lack of supply chains that are neither flexible nor it – they’ve made in recent years. cost-effective. Figure 1: The supply chain is the backbone of a pharma company Planning and Collaboration New Product Active Secondary Wholesaler Pharmacy Pharmaceutical Development Ingredient Manufacturing Distribution Patient Innovation Manufacturing and Packaging Direct-to-pharmacy People and Skills Information Systems Source: PwC Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 3
  • 6. Figure 2: Numerous forces are dictating the need for a different sort of supply chain • More complex manufacturing and distribution processes 1 New product types • Different supply chains for different product types • Shorter product lifecycles • Incremental launch of new medicines 2 Live licensing • Ability to scale up and down very rapidly • Step changes in the revenue curve Even more importantly, few, if any, pharma companies have supply chains capable Increasing • Expansion into health management service of meeting tomorrow’s needs. Numerous forces – both internal and external – are 3 emphasis on outcomes • Leaner and more adaptable cost structure that preserves gross margins at every stage of the product lifecycle reshaping the environment in which the industry operates, with profound consequences for the way in which it • Blurring of the boundaries between primary and acute manufactures and distributes its products care New modes of 4 (see Figure 2). • Much wider distribution network healthcare delivery • Demand-driven manufacturing and distribution processes Growing 5 • Offerings designed for patients in emerging markets importance of • More widely dispersed and more robust supply chain emerging markets • Heavier regulation Greater public 6 scrutiny • Robust risk assessment and risk-management capabilities across the extended supply chain Environmental 7 • Sustainable eco-friendly processes pressures • Relocation of plant to less vulnerable regions Source: PwC 4 PwC
  • 7. New drugs and devices Biologics are in general more susceptible to impurities in the production process and damage during shipping 1. New product types than chemical entities. Making gene- and tissue-based therapies is even Pharma’s portfolio is changing substantially. However, many of these new therapies more difficult. Each sample must be Industry analysts predict that, by 2016, and the devices used to deliver them will individually extracted, propagated, bioengineered vaccines and biologics require more complex manufacturing and prepared and tested before it can be will account for 23% of the global market distribution processes than conventional administered, so it must be treated as a (measured by value), up from 17% in 2009.5 chemical entities. Indeed, some separate manufacturing lot and finished The product base will become even more personalised medicines and poly-pills will at a location near the patient. diverse, as advances in nanotechnology, have to be ‘finished’ at the pharmacy or tissue re-engineering, stem cell research point-of-care (see sidebar, New drugs Many of these specialist treatments will and other such disciplines start to yield fruit and devices). Such challenges will not also need novel delivery devices, since it (see Figure 3). be enough to prevent product lifecycles is difficult to produce oral formulations getting shorter, though; greater competition of large molecules. Micro needles, both from similar new products and from magnetically targeted carriers, nano- totally different product types will reduce particles, polymer capsules and multi- the period of exclusivity all but the most layered medicated patches are likely to personalised therapies enjoy, as it has in the predominate, but such devices are much case of conventional medicines. more complex than those that are used today. Figure 3: By 2020, Pharma will be making a much more diverse range of products 2010 2012 2015 2020 Fixed dose combinations Pharmacogenomics Recycling existing drugs First fully integrated PGx with greater expected product propositions health benefits Imaging Therapeutic monoclonals Biomarkers Better real time imaging for New antibody treatments First wave of clinically diagnosis, monitoring and for cancer and validated biomarkers treatment of multiple diseases inflammatory disorders Human cell therapies Gene-based therapies First stem cell therapies for Tissue engineering First gene-based therapies diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, First tissue engineering or for diseases such as Parkinson’s disease and xenogenic therapies oncology and cardiovascular vascular injuries Nano-carriers Nano-pills Targeted drug delivery Oral imaging diagnostics systems for Alzheimer’s ‘pills’ for gastrointestinal and disease, Parkinson’s other conditions disease, cancer and strokes KEY Mainstream technologies already happening Gene/Cell/Tissue technologies Nanotech-related technologies Source: PwC Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 5
  • 8. 2. Live licensing The launch process will also become Once this happens, the ‘big bang’ launch much more incremental, as new methods will give way to a phased approach in for assessing, approving and monitoring which demand for a new product rises medicines emerge. At present, the as the licence is extended. The interval marketing applications for most new between the initial launch and peak medicines are either approved or rejected; sales point will thus be much longer; the the supply chains for manufacturing and revenue curve will climb more slowly; and distributing them are designed to support the payback period for capital expenditure peak sales volumes; and the revenues they on plant and equipment will be more generate climb in a relatively simple curve. protracted (see Figure 4). So, rather than making a large upfront investment in a But the binary system of authorising new supply chain designed to cope with peak medicines is becoming more graduated. volumes, any company launching a new The European Medicines Agency (EMA) medicine will need to build a supply chain and US Food and Drug Administration that can be rapidly adjusted as the licence (FDA) introduced conditional approvals alters. for certain products some years ago.6 Both agencies are also placing much more emphasis on post-marketing surveillance, and we believe that the current system will eventually be replaced by a system in which new therapies are granted ‘live licences’ contingent on further testing to confirm their safety and efficacy in different patient populations.7 Figure 4: The revenue curve will climb more slowly, when ‘live licences’ replace Option 1 the binary system of approving new products Build one facility to accommodate peak sales Advantages: • Low scale-up risks. Peak Sales • Big site drives operational efficiencies. Disadvantages: • Large capital outlay for un-proven demand. Understanding the 40% 80% Revenue • Low utilisation during growth of the product. cost of capital and impact on margins is Option 2 critical to managing product profitability Adopt a modular manufacturing platform scaling up to support each volume plateau Advantages: • Capex linked to known market demands. Time • High site utilisation. Disadvantages: • Cost and risk of commissioning more sites. • Many small sites increases cost base. Source: PwC 6 PwC
  • 9. 3. The increasing emphasis on outcomes Financially stretched governments and The ability to provide demonstrable value health insurers are simultaneously for money will thus become a critical becoming much more demanding; differentiating factor, and the supply chain they now want clear evidence that the will play a key part in providing that value medicines they buy are really effective. by commissioning and supervising aspects This has huge implications for Pharma. of the services patients need to manage The industry will not only have to manage their health. the manufacturing and distribution of medicines and companion diagnostics, it will also have to ensure that patients get the most from the therapies they receive by supplementing its products with a wide range of supporting services. 4. New modes of healthcare delivery The drive to cut costs and improve outcomes The digitalisation of healthcare delivery, underlies several other changes taking with greater use of electronic health place in healthcare delivery, with equally records, e-prescribing and remote momentous consequences for the industry. monitoring, will reinforce the drive to Most of the OECD countries have been push healthcare into the community. trying to reduce reliance on hospitals However, it will also provide Pharma with and specialists since the 1980s.8 Self- one of the key components needed to administration of medicines is also on the make the transition. E-prescriptions are rise, as patients are encouraged to take a effectively point-of-sale data. Access to more active role in managing their own care. this data will enable pharma companies Both these trends will continue as clinical to build demand-driven supply chains in advances provide better medicines for which healthcare packages for different acute conditions and patients become more patients are assembled at ‘super hubs’ empowered. Many diseases which must at before being delivered to their homes. present be treated in hospital will then be By 2020, information about patients and treated at home. the medicines they need will thus be as important as the products themselves. But migrating from a system in which care is provided in a relatively small number of hospitals, clinics and surgeries to one in which care is provided through a diffuse network of nurses and community carers has enormous ramifications. Pharma will need to distribute its products to many more locations, including patients’ homes. It will therefore have to harness the most efficient ‘final mile’ distribution networks in order to deliver medicines to the door as economically as possible. Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 7
  • 10. Designs for the developing economies Several medical device companies are already designing and manufacturing 5. The growing importance of the products specifically for people living in the developing economies. Freeplay emerging markets Energy has, for example, developed foetal heart rate monitors and pulse The growing importance of the emerging If Pharma is to market its products oximeters that are driven by human markets will accentuate these challenges. effectively in the developing economies, power and designed to cope with Although patients in the developing it will have to understand the needs of harsh conditions. Mindray Medical economies are becoming more prosperous, patients living in these countries and International, one of China’s biggest they typically pay more than half the cost tailor its offerings accordingly; and it can medical equipment manufacturers, of their medicines themselves – and few learn from the medical device industry in also specialises in making inexpensive can afford to pay as much as patients in the this regard (see sidebar, Designs for the patient monitoring and life support mature economies.9 Moreover, the choices developing economies).10 It will also devices. And cardiologists at India’s they make are often based on different have to build a supply chain that is both Care Hospitals have designed cheap values from those that influence the more geographically dispersed and more heart valve replacements, minimising design of products and services intended secure. The number of recorded cases of the number of disposable parts to keep for consumption in the developed world. counterfeit, stolen or illegally diverted costs down. Pharma can learn from Cost and the ability to buy on a daily or medicines has already soared nearly nine- such role models. It can, for instance, weekly basis are more important than fold since 2002.11 develop economical formulations and convenience, for example. stripped-down services for patients who can’t afford its most expensive offerings. 6. Greater public scrutiny In fact, by 2020, the ability to manage risk Other administrations are also tightening and compliance throughout the supply the rules. The Indian government chain will be more crucial than ever before. recently passed a law mandating the use While globalisation is increasing the of track-and-trace barcodes on all drugs risks, greater public awareness and more meant for export, with effect from July diligent enforcement are raising the bar. 2011, following reports that Chinese In 2009, for example, the FDA recalled a counterfeiters were selling fake medicines record 1,742 medicines. A single company labelled ‘Made in India’ in several African accounted for more than 1,000 recalls but, countries.14 even when these are stripped out of the picture, the number of recalls still rose by 50% year on year.12 8 PwC
  • 11. Water is the new gold About 20% of people live in countries that don’t have enough fresh water, but the situation will get much worse over the next decade. The global population is projected to rise from 6.8 billion to 7.6 billion by 2020. The amount 7. Environmental pressures of food needed to sustain mankind is thus increasing – and farming already The Green agenda presents other Indeed, some companies may have to accounts for about 70% of the world’s difficulties. All pharma companies already relocate some of their production facilities total fresh water consumption. Rapid operate under strict environmental to completely different places. Global urbanisation is also driving up demand controls, for obvious reasons. But these warming is changing the world’s weather for safe drinking water and sanitation regulations are likely to become even patterns and many of the traditional facilities, and environmental changes tougher, given the international drive to centres of pharmaceutical manufacturing, like deforestation and global warming curb carbon emissions. Taxes on water such as Singapore, lie in regions that are exacerbating these pressures. consumption are also likely to rise, as will become more vulnerable to extreme Water shortages will have a serious population growth, increased farming, weather events. Even if it proves possible to impact everywhere. The United rapid urbanisation and climate change engineer a better climate – e.g., by locking Nations predicts that, by 2025, 1.8 exacerbate the shortage of fresh water (see up the ice caps or using plants to suck up billion people will be living in regions sidebar, Water is the new gold).15 excess carbon dioxide – geoengineering where water is very scarce, while experts widely agree that the effects However, many of the assets pharma 5 billion could be living in ‘water would be limited. Such measures would, companies own are designed to support stress’ conditions. The problem will at best, reduce peak temperatures during specific manufacturing processes be particularly acute in China, India, the transition to a low-carbon world.16 – processes that typically consume sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and But relocating a plant to a new country or considerable amounts of energy and some parts of Latin America. But even region is a complex business; numerous water. If the industry is to reduce its countries in more temperate zones political, financial and commercial factors environmental footprint, it will have to will suffer. One recent study suggests, must be looked at, as we indicated in adopt new, more eco-friendly processes for example, that large swathes of the “Pharma 2020: Taxing times ahead.”17 and that will require a substantial south-western US will be at risk of investment in new equipment. water shortages by mid-century. The collective impact of these trends To sum up, the current model for The change in the industry’s remit has even manufacturing and distributing medicines more fundamental implications. Pharma isn’t fit for Pharma’s future needs, as many companies will have to manage a vast industry executives recognise. The high network of service providers, as well as margins that made it feasible to tie up manufacturing and distributing their own capital in large stocks of raw materials and products. They will also have to acquire a finished goods are ending. Most companies much deeper understanding of patients. also have asset bases that are ill-suited In a world where outcomes count for to produce the sort of therapies that are everything, it’s not molecules that create now in the pipeline or to cope with new value but, rather, the ability to integrate environmental regulations, so they’ll have data, products and services in a coherent to sell or re-engineer much of their existing business offering. Understanding this plant. shift of emphasis from products to patient outcomes is critical; those firms that can develop and supply integrated product- service packages will be able to deliver significant benefits to every stakeholder in the healthcare value chain. Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 9
  • 12. Removing the roadblocks Timely access to various emerging technologies will help Pharma manufacture and distribute its products more efficiently. Some of these technologies will enable it to build quality into its manufacturing processes, while others will enhance its throughput or facilitate collaboration to realise economies of scale (see Figure 5). Figure 5: Significant opportunities for improving the supply chain exist ‘Assembly line’ production Distribution E-prescribing (POS ‘Self service’ (the patient Formulations that are (disposable components, Quality by structure and Flexible data for supply as an integral component easier to manufacture Design PAT) and continuous manufacturing technology production chain planning) of the supply chain) Planning and Collaboration Sales Marketing Patient Patient Raw Secondary/ RD Materials/ API Packaging Distribution Service Intermediates People and Skills Information Systems Computer modelling Flexible Dynamic sourcing, Aligned New ‘patient Internal and (virtual process development, production micro-processing performance interface’ external facility design and validation, technologies and management technologies collaboration Quality by Design) numbering up Source: PwC 10 PwC
  • 13. Biologics in a bottle One of the main obstacles in developing oral biologics is the fact that proteins break down in the gastrointestinal tract and cease to be active. Some proteins also have a very narrow therapeutic 1. New development technologies index and must be delivered in doses too precise to be orally Formulations that are easier to manufacture administered. Nevertheless, numerous companies are trying to During the past 60 years, audio technology Researchers are also working on the ‘holy create pill-based proteins. has evolved from the vinyl record to the grail’ of oral biologics, and industry experts iPod, but the way in which medicines believe it will eventually be possible to Bangalore-based Biocon is testing are delivered has stayed much the same. produce stable, pill-based versions of an insulin pill in the US and India, Compressed tablets containing a mixture some proteins (see sidebar, Biologics in a for example, with promising of active ingredients and excipients are still bottle).18 preliminary results. Meanwhile, the most common dosage form. Novo Nordisk is conducting a Using formulations that can be more Phase I study of an oral insulin However, more sophisticated drug delivery easily manufactured will enable Pharma pill formulated using Merrion techniques will provide the means with to minimise its investment in product and Pharmaceuticals’ gastrointestinal which to create formulations that are easier process development until the later stages permeation enhancement to manufacture – e.g., powder in vials and of the product development lifecycle, when technology. Several oral biologics liquid droplets on blank tablets. it’s easier to estimate the potential value of for the treatment of autoimmune new products. And the development of oral diseases are also in the pipeline, biologics will eliminate the need for cold- including a new class of drugs chain distribution of such therapies. called JAK inhibitors. One such instance is tasocitinib, which was developed by Pfizer and is now in Phase III trials. Virtual process design and validation Meanwhile, computational modelling The conventional process of scaling up will will enable Pharma to design and validate also be replaced by ‘numbering up’ – i.e., manufacturing processes virtually, using using microreactors in parallel arrays. Quality by Design (QbD) principles. In-line Numbering up has several significant process monitoring via process analytical advantages over traditional techniques. technologies (PAT) will generate the data It dispenses with the need for costly and needed to validate these models and secure time-consuming studies to devise a process regulatory approval. for scaling up chemical reactions, since the process that was used to produce a few The FDA has already published a draft grams of product in the laboratory is the guidance in which it proposes replacing same one that is used to synthesise larger ‘three-batch validation’ with a three-stage quantities. In addition, using microreactors methodology that involves designing a makes it much easier to control key suitable process, using the knowledge parameters and thus improve yields. gained in development and scale-up; ensuring the process is capable of reproducibly manufacturing commercial batches; and validating it continuously during routine production.19 By 2020, this approach is likely to be the norm. Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 11
  • 14. 2. New manufacturing technologies Flexible production Virtual engineering will not only accelerate Collectively, these improvements will allow the validation of new processes, it will pharma companies to create different facilitate the rapid reconfiguration of supply chains for different product types existing manufacturing lines for different and markets, manage sudden shifts products. With flexible processes and in demand such as the step changes miniaturised, modular components that associated with live licensing and reduce can be quickly connected or disconnected their manufacturing costs. They should like pieces of ‘Lego’, it will be relatively simultaneously help the industry fulfil easy to alter the order in which specific its social responsibilities, including the unit operations are performed. Widespread need both to pioneer more sustainable use of disposable technologies will manufacturing processes and to produce likewise reduce changeover times (and the medicines the entire world can afford. consumption of clean water). Continuous processing and automation By 2020, most medicines will also be Micro-containers with embedded manufactured continuously. Process superparamagnetic nano-particles can be tomography and other such technologies treated with an alternating magnetic field will enable companies to capture real-time to release materials encapsulated in bubbles data on critical processes, develop complex within the material and thus converted into multivariate models and automatically micro-reactors for the efficient production compensate for unexpected process of thousands of individual doses of tailored disturbances. Process data generated biological products.20 during the development phase will be Micro-processing will even make it possible used to ‘teach’ process control systems to formulate some medicines and poly-pills to respond to process disturbances even at the point at which they are dispensed. before commercial manufacturing begins. Several companies have already started Meanwhile, advances in colloidal and foam providing pharmaceutical compounding systems will facilitate the micro-processing services, one such instance being Fagron, a of active pharmaceutical ingredients subsidiary of the Belgian Arseus.21 But, by (APIs). 2020, the pharmacist will be able to ‘mix’ medicines individually on the premises, using validated formulation equipment – much as DIY stores mix paints to produce customised colours. 12 PwC
  • 15. Transgenic production Simulation and automation aren’t the only Other examples include the Netherlands- tools to hand; transgenic engineering offers based Pharming, which uses transgenic a fundamentally different way of producing rabbits to make the C1 inhibitor protein.23 many therapeutic proteins. The process Transgenic production has several involves inserting foreign genes into host significant advantages over more animals or plants so that they express traditional methods for producing proteins they wouldn’t otherwise express therapeutic proteins, such as mammalian and then using them to ‘manufacture’ large cell culture and bacterial systems. quantities of these proteins. It requires substantially less capital GTC Biotherapeutics has already expenditure, is easy to scale up or down demonstrated the commercial viability in line with demand (by increasing or of transgenic production techniques with decreasing the size of the herd) and can its recombinant human antithrombin be undertaken in rural environments ATryn, which is extracted from the milk of where the infrastructure for more high- genetically modified goats.22 tech manufacturing techniques may not be available. 3. New distribution Fingering the fakes technologies Various new tracking technologies are in the works. One such Just as new technologies are emerging example is the ‘bokode’ – a to help pharma companies manufacture kind of data tag that can hold a wider and more complex range of far more information than a medicines, so new technologies are conventional barcode and be read emerging to help them distribute those from much further away. DNA medicines. Cloud computing will provide labelling could also provide a way the information platforms they need to of fingerprinting proteins and share data securely and economically determining where they have been with suppliers around the world, analyse manufactured, if the problems the data very rapidly and respond to with selecting a DNA fraction sudden changes in supply and demand, that doesn’t affect a protein’s while advanced tracking technologies performance can be overcome. will enable them to monitor products DNA fingerprinting has already from the factory gate to the patient – an been used to identify ‘counterfeit’ increasingly important feature, as the foods; researchers in Spain industry manufactures more biologics with recently used a technique called high unit values and specialist delivery forensically informative nucleotide requirements (see sidebar, Fingering the sequencing to test nine commercial fakes).24 seafood samples containing shark meat and isolate those that were incorrectly labelled. Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 13
  • 16. Tablets go high-tech Proteus Biomedical has developed a miniature digestible chip which can be attached to a conventional medicine and used to monitor patient compliance. The chip sends a signal to a sensing device worn 4. New patient interface technologies on the skin, which records the time and date at which the medicine has New ‘patient interface’ technologies are By 2020, there will be many such patient been ingested as well as measuring likewise being developed, some of which interface technologies on the market certain vital signs. The information will bring pharma companies closer to and the information they generate will is then forwarded, via wireless patients than ever before. One instance is help patients manage their health more technology, to the patient’s doctor. the prototype chip and receiver devised by effectively, as well as allowing healthcare Novartis has previously tested Proteus Biomedical, which records exactly providers to monitor their compliance the chip on 20 patients who are when a tablet is metabolised (see sidebar, in real time. But they will also provide taking its blood pressure treatment Tablets go high-tech).25 pharma companies with information Diovan, with impressive results; the they can use both to design more robust company reported that compliance products and services, and to develop more could be improved from 30% to accurate production and distribution plans. 80% in six months. 5. Greater collaboration Technology isn’t the only answer to At present, there are three distinct supply Pharma’s problems, though; greater chains for designing, manufacturing and collaboration with the other parties distributing pharmaceuticals; designing, involved in healthcare provision will also manufacturing and distributing medical help the industry become more efficient. devices; and providing healthcare services (including laboratory work and pathology). Integrating these supply chains so that all the upstream and downstream partners can see the full picture would enable them to plan ahead more accurately and manage demand more cost-effectively (see Figure 6). Figure 6: By 2020, the pharmaceuticals, medical devices and healthcare services supply chains will be fully integrated Current Situation Situation in 2020 Pharmaceutical Supply Chain Integrated Supply Chain Pharmaceuticals + Medical Devices + Healthcare Services Pharma Intermediate Hospitals warehouse Pharmacies Patient Intermediate Hospitals Pharma warehouse Pharmacies Medical Devices Supply Chain Intermediate Manufacturers warehouses or Hospitals Intermediate Pharmacies warehouse or Hospitals Patient wholesalers Manufacturers Pharmacies wholesaler Patient Primary care (Doctor or Healthcare Services Supply Chain Hospital) Primary care (Doctor or hospital) Secondary care Patient (Hospital or Secondary care (Hospital or community care) community care) Areas of full supply chain visibility Source: PwC 14 PwC
  • 17. Creating an integrated healthcare products With access to each roadmap for each and services supply chain would not be illness, and data on the incidence of easy. But one of the main tools used to each illness in a given population, manage healthcare quality could prove pharma companies and medical device invaluable here. Healthcare providers in manufacturers will be able to predict many parts of the world are developing demand for their products much more defined care pathways to standardise accurately. They will also be able to the treatment of patients with the same define a supply pathway for each product, illnesses and thus improve outcomes. This depending on whether it’s a one-off will ultimately result in the creation of treatment (such as a prophylactic vaccine, defined healthcare packages for each care gene therapy or anti-infective) or a pathway. recurring treatment for a chronic condition, which must be supplied on an ongoing basis (see Figure 7). Figure 7: The development of care pathways will provide greater supply chain predictability Structured Interventions Defined Care Pathway Healthcare Tests/ package Doctor Diagnosis Drug Device Outcome Unwell Physician Chronic Care Labs/Assay Healthy Prevention Compliance/Outcome Cure Source: PwC There is potential for collaboration in other Some companies may choose to establish ways, too. Most pharma companies at joint ventures, while others turn to third the moment manufacture and distribute parties. Abbott Laboratories and Boehringer their own products, for example, but this Ingelheim already manufacture for other reduces asset utilisation rates and drives organisations, for example.26 And the up distribution costs, as well as causing contract manufacturing sector is expanding unnecessary environmental damage. very rapidly. In fact, market research firm Conversely, sharing manufacturing and BCC Research estimates that the bulk- and distribution resources would be much more dosage-form drugs segment will be worth economical. A few pharma companies about $73 billion by 2014, more than double have started experimenting with ‘shared the $36 billion it was worth in 2007.27 services’, primarily to support joint product development initiatives. However, the vast majority of companies still build, own and operate their own supply chain infrastructure. Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 15
  • 18. Collaborating to cut the kilometres In September 2009, confectionery giants Nestlé and Mars joined forces with a leading British supermarket chain to synchronise deliveries of their products over the busy Christmas period and reduce their environmental footprint. The two manufacturers worked closely together to coordinate their deliveries to Experience in other industries has also Moreover, some of the most sophisticated three regional distribution centres demonstrated the benefits of managing third-party logistics (3PL) providers so that any part load order that distribution collectively (see sidebar, – i.e., companies that offer freight either company received could Collaborating to cut the kilometres).28 management and warehousing – are be combined in one truck load. And increasing demand for biologics has expanding into supply chain management By dint of collaborating, they stimulated the development of specialist and coordination services. And it is eliminated over 12,000 kilometres logistics providers capable of handling very arguably these fourth-party logistics of duplicate journeys. sensitive pharmaceutical freight. Many (4PL) providers, as they are known, that provide specialised service where each can deliver the greatest improvements. shipment is transported in temperature When telecommunications equipment – and humidity – controlled conditions, manufacturer Alcatel turned to a 4PL to monitored from a dedicated call centre manage the supply chain for its e-business using web-based tracking and reporting, networking division, for example, its and delivered directly to the customer’s supply chain costs fell from 5.8% to 5.1% door.29 of revenues within two years in that division.30 In other words, the contract manufacturing and logistics industries are both maturing and, by 2020, some of the biggest providers will offer integrated supply chain services. This will enable pharma companies to share resources and capitalise on economies of scale throughout the value chain. 16 PwC
  • 19. Choosing among the options There are two options for companies Companies that concentrate on mass- We’ve discussed why the vast focusing on specialist therapies and market medicines, including generics and majority of pharma companies treatments for orphan diseases, and two over-the-counter (OTC) products, can options for companies focusing on mass- either become low-cost manufacturers will have to build supply chains market medicines. We believe that most or build supply chains that service other with new manufacturing, companies will fall into one of these two organisations and create a profit in their distribution and service- categories by 2020, although the very own right (see Figure 8). management techniques, and largest companies may cover both ends Companies with a broad range of products some of the developments that of the spectrum. But they will still have that present different characteristics and can help them. But what route to develop different supply chains for therefore supply chain needs, will in the different product types. should they take? future need to segment their supply chain More specifically, companies that operation, aligning to the unique demands concentrate on specialist therapies can of the product group. Pharma companies either exit from manufacturing and that operate more than one supply chain operate virtual supply chains or become option will increase with the breadth and service innovators. demand of the portfolio. Figure 8: Four options exist for restructuring the pharmaceutical supply chain Operations Strategy Specialist Therapies Mass-Market Medicines Virtual Service Low-Cost Profit Manufacturer Innovator Provider Centre Create a virtual Build a service- Build a reliable, ‘no- Combine agile, network of integrated oriented supply chain frills’ supply chain economic supply partners to enhance brands to deliver products manufacturing and and differentiate as economically as distribution with the company from its possible provision of satellite competitors services to generate profits Source: PwC Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 17
  • 20. Recommendations for becoming a virtual manufacturer Our experience suggests that there are several key steps a would-be virtual manufacturer should take. It should start by defining what it is and does, including its business strategy, aspirations and corporate 1. The virtual manufacturer culture. Then it should identify the financial The first option for companies making However, despite these advantages, no and technical demands its portfolio specialist therapies is to outsource the Big Pharma company has virtualised its presents, and how those demands are likely entire supply chain from production whole network yet. Concerns about the to change over time. Once it’s looked in the of the earliest clinical batches to calibre of the contract manufacturing mirror and analysed its requirements, it can full-scale manufacturing, packaging sector, supply integrity, quality and crunch the numbers, with a detailed study and distribution, and become virtual compliance persist. In one recent survey, of its internal capabilities, product flows manufacturers. This is very different for example, 91% of the firms that relied and costs, and compare its own capabilities from engaging in the sort of tactical on outsourcing reported experiencing a and costs with those of potential suppliers. outsourcing most pharma companies ‘significant incident’ as a result of quality Any company planning to become a virtual now employ currently. Becoming a problems or delays, compared with only manufacturer should also hire good virtual manufacturer isn’t a short-term 59% of those that performed most of negotiators, because it’s the deal – not the fix to address cash, capacity or capability their manufacturing in-house.32 science – that will ultimately determine constraints but, rather, a deliberate The consolidation of the contract whether it succeeds. So it needs people who strategy. And executing that strategy manufacturing sector will alleviate some can forge strong commercial contracts. And successfully involves building a network of these difficulties. A small cadre of it should make sure it retains enough know- of fully integrated supply partners. global players will replace the multitude how both to evaluate its suppliers properly A number of small firms have already of local providers that currently exist. and to track their performance, including taken the virtual route, but several large The evolution of the logistics industry any changes in the materials suppliers companies have recently announced will likewise result in the emergence and processes they use and any problems plans to outsource a bigger share of their of strong 4PLs capable of distributing maintaining quality control or yield rates. manufacturing. AstraZeneca intends healthcare packages directly to patients After that, the company can concentrate on to outsource all its API production or their healthcare providers efficiently choosing the contractors it wants to work over the next five to seven years, for and economically. But any company that with, and here the secret is to be selective. example, while Bristol-Myers Squibb, decides to operate a virtual supply chain Focusing on a small set of contractors and GlaxoSmithKline, Merck and Pfizer aim will still have to maintain sufficient working closely with them during the to outsource as much as 40% of their in-house expertise to choose the right tender process ensures they have a clear API needs.31 partners and monitor them constantly. grasp of the company’s business, and the Baxter has first-hand experience of a The business case for virtualisation is complexities of the products or processes serious breach in the integrity of its clear. It enables a company to shift to that are being outsourced. But it’s also supply chain, for example. In February a flexible cost base, reduce the risks essential to maintain a close relationship 2008, two Chinese plants were found associated with investing in new assets with those suppliers after they’ve been responsible for producing contaminated and access new technologies and skills. appointed. Lifecycle management of supplies of chondroitin sulphate, the It also helps it align its supply chain contracts is crucial in realising value and raw material used to make its blood network with its demand forecasts, minimising contract ‘leakage’ through off- thinner Heparin, and Baxter is now transfer the risk of primary and back- contract buying or poorly aligned service facing a spate of law suits.33 up supply to a third party and drive levels. costs down by switching products and processes between competing suppliers in its network. 18 PwC
  • 21. In order to manage the risks associated Figure 9: Most pharma companies struggle to get supply chain data with collaboration, virtual manufacturers promptly from critical suppliers, distributors and other company sites will need to ensure they have access to real- time data from every stakeholder in their 19% supply chains. At present, most pharma 49% Critical companies rely on periodic audits, but Suppliers 27% these only produce snapshots in time. And 6% most companies can’t get vital supply-chain data very rapidly. In one recent study, only 11% a small percentage of respondents said 40% they could get information from critical Distributors 37% suppliers and distributors within two 13% hours. Indeed, a number struggled to get the information within three days (see 28% Figure 9).34 Other 43% Company Some of these difficulties can be resolved by Sites 18% using interoperable systems and common 11% practices, requiring suppliers to provide a complete history for every batch of raw Within 2 hours Within 1 business day Within 3 business days After 3 business days materials or components they produce and replacing periodic audits with constant Source: Axendia surveillance. But any company that takes the virtual manufacturing route will also have to encourage its suppliers to collaborate in developing a better understanding of key parameters and implementing process controls to produce greater supply chain visibility. In effect, it will need to treat its suppliers as extensions of itself, rather than as separate manufacturing and distribution islands. Pharma 2020: Supplying the future 19
  • 22. Recommendations for becoming a service innovator Becoming a service innovator entails developing an intimate understanding of patients, by linking up with patient groups, participating in online patient communities and social networks (e.g., PatientsLikeMe) and giving patients a forum in which to provide feedback. Any 2. The service innovator company that wants to take the service Alternatively, companies making It will also have to restructure its asset innovation route should also analyse the specialist therapies can become service base and invest in new capabilities, both care pathway for every disease for which innovators – i.e., build supply chains that internal and external. It will have to build it has medicines, including the clinical are capable both of manufacturing and a supply chain that’s sufficiently mature and economic implications of different distributing complex treatments, and of to manage a vast network of suppliers and forms of intervention, since diet, exercise, commissioning and managing a multitude yet sufficiently nimble to respond rapidly compliance support and counselling also of suppliers to provide supporting health to the demands of numerous different play a role in managing many illnesses. management services. German healthcare customers. And it will have to develop Thereafter, the company should aim to group Fresenius has already expanded a new financial structure. Much of the get as close as possible to its customers. In into services very successfully; it’s now economic value it creates will depend other words, it should invest as much and as the world’s leading provider of dialysis on the activities it performs in its local passionately in understanding the current machines and dialysis care.35 Other markets, rather than the medicines that and future needs of healthcare providers as companies, such as Baxter and Novo constitute its underlying intellectual it’s traditionally invested in RD. It should Nordisk, are adopting a similar approach.36 property – a change that carries huge tax also look for partners – be they contract implications.37 However, becoming a service innovator manufacturers, logistics companies, isn’t easy. Any company that chooses this That said, the provision of integrated hospitals, clinics, data analysis firms, option will have to make major cultural product-service packages has many technology suppliers or lifestyle service changes. It will, for example, have to advantages. It enables a company to providers – with a similar corporate culture understand its role in every care pathway differentiate its offerings, reach new and ethos. and concentrate on helping patients markets and create new sources of revenue. The next step is to start building networks manage the disease lifecycle, as distinct It also creates opportunities to enhance for patients with different diseases. from trying to stimulate demand for its the customer relationship and improve That’s partly a process of negotiation; the products. And it will have to look at the customer loyalty, because services are participants in each network will need to supply chain through the eyes of the more dependent on skill and more difficult agree on their goals, as well as defining patient as the ultimate customer. to imitate than products. what they’ll do to realise those goals and how they’ll be rewarded for their efforts. But it’s also essential to create a common supporting infrastructure, robust performance indicators, proper governance structure and clear audit trail. And it’s important not to underestimate the cultural adjustment that’s needed. The task of the service provider is to commission and manage a huge network of contractors around the globe, and ensure they provide a truly integrated product-service offering. That’s a very different job from manufacturing and distributing its own products. 20 PwC