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July/August Supplement 2016

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Articles in this Issue

  • Creating a Global C‘R’DMO for the Future of (Bio)pharma:

    Dawn Von Rohr, Steven R. Hagen, Ph.D.
    Building a premier contract research, development and manufacturing services organization requires an understanding of the marketplace, a long-term strategy for both inorganic and organic growth and the ability to effectively integrate acquisitions.
  • The KEY TO Pharma’s Next Generation Success

    Nigel Walker
    There is tremendous pressure on the pharmaceutical industry to accelerate the development of novel drugs that meet pressing unmet medical needs, from treatments for widespread chronic illnesses to those for rare diseases. At the same time, there is a clamor for lower drug prices. The U.S. Congress has entered the fray with the 21st Century Cures Act, while FDA has implemented multiple accelerated approval pathways. Sponsor drug companies are increasingly turning to contract service providers for assistance and many are seeking more collaborative relationships - either preferred or strategic partnerships - to ensure success in a highly competitive marketplace.
  • Analytical Method Development: Key to Process Development

    Helmut Schneider, Ph.D., Keith Webber
    Throughout the entire drug development lifecycle, efficient and cost-effective routes to candidate drug substances with high potential for regulatory approval are established. This work involves investigation of the impact of numerous parameters on process performance (yield, selectivity, etc.) and product quality. Timely access to accurate analytical information is fundamental to completing process development projects effectively and efficiently. As a result, methods are continually evaluated and optimized as needed through all stages of the drug development lifecycle for the purposes of product characterization, or to be qualified and validated as release assays.
  • Quality by Design: Transforming 21st Century Pharmaceutical Manufacturing

    John Moscariello, Ph.D.
    The QbD concept has been widely adopted as a standard of practice for manufacturers, including those in the automotive, semiconductor, electronics and chemical processing industries. Regulators have also embraced QbD as a means to modernize the regulation of pharmaceutical manufacturing and product quality through manufacturing science, based on methodologies proven across countless applications. From their standpoint, QbD-based processes hold great potential in creating the efficient, agile and flexible manufacturing systems required by biopharma to reliably deliver safe, effective high-quality drug products to patients in a secure supply chain.
  • Patient-Centric Drug Development: Designing Medicines to Succeed

    Kevin Haehl
    Pharma’s next blockbuster is increasingly hard to find and that’s shifting the emphasis of R&D spending and the traditional direction of innovation. According to Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development, industry leaders will spend $2.5 billion to get a drug from conception to approval.1
  • Embracing Formulation Expertise to Extend Exclusivity & Improve the Patient Experience

    Syed T. Husain
    With considerable room for growth in emerging markets, the surge in biopharmaceutical drug development and approvals, as well as merger and acquisition activities that are helping to further existing expertise, has left the pharmaceuticals market poised for growth.
  • Future Pharma Partner Models – Regulation 3.0

    Steve Kuehn, Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D., Emilie Branch, Carrie Cao, Ph.D.,, Jerry Sticker
    At one point the future was more about the drug — finding the compounds and molecules that stopped the pain, killed the infection or immunized humans from history’s great diseases.
  • Future Pharma Partner Models - Effective Drug Delivery

    Steve Kuehn, Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D., Emilie Branch, Carrie Cao, Ph.D.,, Jerry Sticker
    The primary function of drug delivery is to facilitate active pharmaceutical ingredients reaching the target site and exerting a desired efficacy and safety profile. Drug makers have been relying heavily on drug delivery systems (including excipients and formulations) to improve solubility of drug compounds and achieve better bioavailability. Poor solubility presents a major challenge for the pharmaceutical industry. Approximately 40% of marketed drugs and 80% of compounds in discovery and development suffer from low solubility and/ or low permeability.1
  • Future Pharma Partner Models - Outsourcing Trends in API Development & Manufacturing

    Steve Kuehn, Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D., Emilie Branch, Carrie Cao, Ph.D.,, Jerry Sticker
    As the population increases and the number of regional markets entering the global landscape continues to mount, drug companies are feeling pressure to bring drugs to market more quickly. CDMO outsourcing remains a key strategy for alleviating the pressures of development. In particular, API manufacturing has maintained a firm position as the most outsourced area for drug manufacturers. This has led to robust growth associated with the sector, which is expected to steadily rise, especially over the short term.1 The API market is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 6.5% through 2020, when it will have a forecasted value of $185.9 billion.2
  • Future Pharma Partner Models - Unique Delivery & Design

    Steve Kuehn, Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D., Emilie Branch, Carrie Cao, Ph.D.,, Jerry Sticker
    For optimal pharmacokinetics, sometimes it’s about getting the right amount of a drug to the right place at the right time. Whether a drug is delivered orally, parenterally or through some other method like inhalation, bioavailability might be greatly enhanced when a drug is combined with certain types of nanoparticles in development today. These nanoparticles, when attached to small molecule drugs, often act as vehicles to get the drug where it needs to go, sometimes by getting it to where it might not ordinarily be allowed to go. Thus, medications that could help alleviate central nervous system (CNS) disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease are given the opportunity to work more efficiently.1
  • Future Pharma Partner Models - Next-Generation Therapies

    Steve Kuehn, Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D., Emilie Branch, Carrie Cao, Ph.D.,, Jerry Sticker
    Many of the most promising next generation drug products are based on biologic active pharmaceutical ingredients that require new technologies that enable their manufacture, characterization (identity, viability, purity, potency, viral safety) and other testing (sterility, release, etc.) and distribution at the large scales required for commercial drugs.
  • Delivering on Unfulfilled Promises - Building a CDMO

    Tim Tyson
    The landscape for contract manufacturing organizations (CMOs) serving the pharmaceutical industry is changing rapidly. Most notably in 2015, the concept of contract development and manufacturing organizations (CDMOs) was fully realized. Many conventional CMOs have actively pursued acquisitions and internal investments, some funded through initial public offerings, in order to become CDMOs with the capability to support the needs of pharmaceutical customers across the entire development and commercialization cycle in an increasingly integrated manner.
  • Evolving Strategic Partnership Models

    Christian Sauveur
    The pace and therapeutic achievements of the industry are reaching new heights not seen since the passing of the blockbuster or “Pharma 1.0” business model. Ernst & Young (EY) analysts explain that to help face mounting shareholder, competitive, regulatory and social headwinds, the industry has, over the past decade, followed a strategy of diversifying into a “Pharma 2.0” model around product lines that are less exposed to R&D and market risks.
  • Process Performance Qualification Prep: A Strategic Approach Leads to Success

    Vince Ammoscato, Dr. Charles J. Stankovic, Ph.D.
    Contract manufacturers with demonstrated experience developing robust processes and successfully navigating the approval process for Fast Track, Breakthrough Therapy and other special designation products are in high demand. These service providers help their pharma partners meet both their aggressive deadlines and regulatory requirements by implementing an effective process qualification strategy.
  • Pharmaceutical Processing Solutions for Today and the Future

    Our comprehensive portfolio of standard and custom-designed equipment, machinery and entire production lines includes benchtop R&D solutions, completely integrated industrial-scale plant and both batch-based and continuous processing technology.
  • Nice Insight AnNual Pharmaceutical Equipment Report

    RJ Palermo
    Of the nearly 600 buyers of equipment services responding to the 2016 Nice Insight Pharmaceutical Equipment Annual Survey, 81% indicated they report to either operational or technical departments in their organizations. When purchasing pharmaceutical equipment, respondents ranked “reliability” as their number one priority. Regarding the attributes that purchasers seek in their current and prospective equipment suppliers, the majority of respondents (55%) ranked manufacturing / process integrity as the top attribute they use to evaluate equipment suppliers.
  • Investment Recovery for Pharma Equipment

    Matt Hicks
    Investment Recovery for Pharma Equipment,” the first of two-part article, can be read in its entirety in the Q2 Pharma’s Almanac. This is a short synopsis of Part I, which discussed the various affects that both mergers and acquisitions, and an ever-changing product mix, have on pharmaceutical companies. Often the result is two distinct challenges — one is managing surplus inventory, and the second is managing an effective capital equipment investment recovery strategy that addresses the surplus inventory challenge.
  • Accelerating Approval and Reducing Costs of Spray Dried Drugs through Development by Design...

    Filipe Gaspar, Márcio Temtem, Ph.D.
    Growing Demand for Spray Drying The application of sophisticated drug discovery methods has led to much better, but also more complex, chemical entities that suffer from poor water solubility/bioavailability. In fact, 40% of drugs currently on the market and 90% of candidates in the pipeline fall into this category.1 These complex small-molecule drug substances require enabling drug delivery technologies to achieve the desired level of efficacy
  • Track & Trace Systems For Serialization And Aggregation

    Pere Vilanova
    The ability to track and trace pharmaceutical product in the distribution channel has always been a regulatory imperative, but those regulations are evolving and becoming more sophisticated to improve drug safety and combat the threat of counterfeits in the supply chain. In spite of the regulatory burden, the ability to accurately track and trace product and manage the disposition of stock after its sale can add business value beyond efficiently demonstrating compliance.
  • Novel Equipment Solutions

    The outlook for the pharmaceutical equipment markets (production and packaging) is quite positive. According to PharmSource, the market size for bio/pharmaceutical industry spending on investment for new plant and equipment was $18.6 billion in 2013 and rose to $21.4 billion in 2014 — an increase of 13%.1 Meanwhile, the pharmaceutical packaging equipment market was valued by Markets and Markets at $5.18 billion and predicted to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 6.9% to reach $7.24 billion in 2020.2 In addition to general expansion of the overall pharmaceutical market, the key driver for growth of these equipment sectors is the need for novel and flexible equipment to maintain competition.
  • CDMOs Crucial for Bringing Promising Next-Generation Therapies to Market

    Richard Snyder, Ph.D., Mark Bamforth, MBA
    More than 500 companies are involved in cell therapy technology,1 while the market for gene therapy is predicted to be valued at greater than $200 billion by 2020.2 Globally, there are over 2300 gene therapy3 and 372 cell therapy4 clinical trials currently in progress targeting numerous cancers, hemophilia, diabetes, cardiovascular, neurologic, and many other acquired and inherited diseases.
  • Sustainable Strategies For Contract Development And Manufacturing Service Growth

    Haig Armaghanian
    Acquisition has become a favorite tactic by contract pharma’s most prominent players, but there’s more than one path to sustained growth, especially for those seeking the scale, global presence and technical acumen the bio/pharmaceutical industry is demanding.
  • Innovating Equipment: Inline Buffer Dilution Technology

    Inline buffer dilution (IBD) has been recognized as a game changer and a highly optimized solution to this critical processing step. Kimo Sanderson, Vice President of Marketing and Client Services at Asahi Kasei Bioprocess America, lends his leading industry insights with Pharma’s Almanac to better describe the methods behind this crucial function.
  • Harnessing CDMO Expertise for Fill-Finish and Inspection of Sterile Pharmaceuticals

    Philippe Mougin, Ph.D.
    The 2016 Nice Insight CDMO Outsourcing Survey found that 66% and 50% of respondents’ businesses were engaged in the development of new biologic entities and biosimilars, respectively.1 Further, global spending on medicine in general is expected to hit $1.3 trillion by 2014 — up approximately 30% from 2013 — and the demand for biopharmaceuticals is increasing in response to growth in emerging markets and the surge in oncological innovation.2
  • COMPANY PROFILE

    Nice Insight and the Pharma’s Almanac editorial team would like to thank all the companies participating in this quarter’s edition. The following are the profiles of the industry-leading companies that have appeared in this issue. These companies make it their business to energize pharma’s increasingly complex supply chain and pursue excellence every day in support of the industry’s overall quality, health and safety goals.
  • Function and Form: Advanced Pharma Packaging Design and Processing

    Contract packaging firms that offer low cost, timeliness, flexibility and creativity, combined with assured high quality, can add real value by providing unique and differentiating solutions while allowing brand owners to focus on their core capabilities.
  • Collaboration Is the Name of the Game

    Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D.
    The rapid changes occurring in the pharmaceutical industry are placing mounting pressures on (bio) pharmaceutical companies to accomplish more with less. Outsourcing to access unique technologies, lower costs and accelerate timelines is now the norm. The winners are service providers and pharma customers that form true partnerships based on trust and understanding. In this fourth edition of the Pharma’s Almanac, we explore different collaboration models and how both innovator firms and CDMOs are applying them while they navigate changing pharma industry dynamics and build strong foundations for future success.
  • Roundtable

    Process design, measurement and control for enabling continuous processing adoption in the biotech and pharmaceutical industries – the shift from batch to continuous production methods is transforming the future of pharmaceutical manufacturing. The potential economic gains from increasing capacity utilization and reducing the length of process development, product release times and capital costs are driving the paradigm shift.
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