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September/October 2016 Supplement

Supplement

 

 

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Articles in this Issue

  • A Foundation of Innovation

    Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D., Steve Kuehn, Dr. Andrew Warmington, Ph .D.
    Innovation is at the heart of the pharmaceutical industry. Researchers develop innovative approaches to understanding biological processes, including the identification of potential new targets for which novel drug substances are developed. New technologies are continually being introduced to improve the efficiency and productivity of discovery, development and manufacturing activities. And all the while, the goal is to provide safe and effective medicines to patients in need.
  • Equipment Redeployment’s Strategic Role

    Adam Covitt
    in the post-blockbuster era, pharma’s major manufacturers are under pressure to increase the cost efficiency of their manufacturing operations and extend the service life of their processing equipment. equipment investment recovery strategies that include a well-planned and executed redeployment process and the right partners can add flexibility and extend asset utilization across geographically dispersed operations.
  • The Importance of Flexibility: Competitive Solutions In an Era of Innovation

    Guy Tiene, MA
    Nice insight is in conversation with uwe harbauer, senior vice president, pharma business unit, bosch packaging technology, to discuss how equipment upplier/pharma Company relationships have changed over time, including the growing importance of longer-term, more strategic interactions.
  • New Forms of Outreach and Improving Clinical Trial Recruitment and Data Integrity

    As the cost of drug development continues to mount in unison with the demand for safer, more cost-effective drugs, the pharmaceuticals market is in need of innovation in clinical trial management and design to keep pace with the demand for more effective trial data.
  • Automating Drug Discovery’s Next Breakthrough

    Contemporary, successful drug innovation springs fundamentally from a well-managed r&d effort, one increasingly reliant on automation, robotics and high-throughput analytical tools to identify the highest- potential targets quickly and efficiently.
  • RX-360: an Industrygroup Like No Other

    Guy Villax
    Rx-360 is an industry consortium founded in 2009. Our mission is to ensure patient safety by enhancing the authenticity and quality of medicines around the world.
  • Dry-powder Inhalation Formulation: Balancing Performance and Manufacturability

    Conrad Winters, Eunice Costa
    There is growing demand for dry-powder inhalation formulations of drugs to treat both respiratory and systemic diseases. composite particle technology is allowing the development of more efficient formulations, even for challenging molecules. spray drying is an enabling technology for composite particle preparation. Formulators must be aware, however, of the tradeoffs between properties that improve aerodynamic performance in the lung but negatively impact process yields or throughputs.
  • Distribution Channel Security in Ensuring Drug Supply and Safety

    Congress passed the drug supply chain security Act in 2013. three years into its phased implementation, industry compliance activity continues, as this benchmark ruling comes due in 2017.
  • Flexibility in Manufacturing Is Fundamental to Production Success

    With record-high drug approval rates, and next-generation therapies that operate via novel mechanisms of action showing great promise in the clinic, the likelihood of innovation seems guaranteed as long as numerous manufacturing challenges are addressed.
  • Seeking Quality Deals: Consolidation and Acquisition

    Andrew Ferraro
    Nice insight’s virtual panelists explore the deal-structuring shift in the pharmaceutical market from an investor perspective.
  • Cultivating a Proactive Quality Culture

    Philippe Dartiguelongue
    Preventing patient risk is perhaps the most important goal for any pharmaceutical manufacturer. The quality of a drug substance or product is directly linked to where and how it’s made. As a result of the gravity of production, management must ensure that process variation is eliminated, consistent quality is guaranteed and there are no threats of defects that may potentially harm patients or interrupt supply. To assure quality, Servier takes a holistic approach, bringing people, process and policy together to create an efficient, agile QA/QC culture.
  • Pharmaceutical Packaging: Differentiation Equates to Brand Loyalty

    Guy Tiene, MA
    Nice insight’s virtual panelists share their thoughts about the integral role that safer, simpler and smarter packaging plays in a compound’s success.
  • Capsugel’s Transformation

    Nigel Walker
    It absolutely has. Throughout our history, Capsugel has been at the forefront of innovation in hard capsules and polymer science, and we have built great relationships with customers in the biopharmaceutical and consumer health and nutrition industries. Over the past few years, we saw several opportunities to offer our customers even more — to complement our capsule engineering know-how and establish ourselves as a leading global provider of technology platforms for the design, development and manufacture of a wide range of innovative dosage forms.
  • Designing Effective Drug Formulations: Keys to Successful Proof of Concept Services

    Ed Scholtz, Ph.D.
    Acomprehensive understanding of the properties of a drug substance — its solubility in solvents and buffer systems, compatibility with excipients, stability under different physiological conditions, solidstate characteristics, basic physicochemical properties, etc.
  • Meeting Unmet Patient Needs withSmall-Volume APIs

    Stephen A. Munk
    Personalized medicine, precision medicine, evidencebased medicine and patientcentered outcomes research dominate the landscape today and are driving the need for significant change in manufacturing strategies. Pressure is mounting to accelerate the development and commercialization of novel drugs with greater efficacy than current treatments, while also increasing their quality and safety.
  • Supply Chain Management and the Importance of Security of Supply

    Syed T. Husain
    According to the FDA, 64% of all reported drug shortages are caused by quality issues (37% manufacturing, 27% delays/capacity) and another 27% are due to raw materials, so it’s not surprising that the 2016 Nice Insight CDMO Outsourcing Survey showed quality as the most important factor when selecting a new outsourcing partner.
  • Advancing Patient-Centric Parenteral Drug Strategies

    Marga Viñes, Oriol Prat
    For the foreseeable future, therapies delivered via parenteral routes will dominate advancements in healthcare and patient outcomes. Regulators, governments, health systems and — most importantly — patients are all stakeholders, linked by dependence on the safe, reliable and abundant supply of sterile liquid drugs. There is little dispute that this sector of pharmacopeia represents a tremendous growing opportunity for drug innovators and owners.
  • A Look At Recent Pharma Industry Innovations

    Nigel Walker
    Small-molecule drugs continue to dominate the marketplace and the drug pipeline despite growing demand for biologics. Advances in combinatorial chemistry are, in fact, leading to the discovery of novel, highly complex and efficacious active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). At the same time, there is a significant push to employ synthetic routes that are not only feasible at production scale, but also cost efficient, atom economical and more environmentally friendly.
  • Roundtable

    Within the past year, there have been several new technologies introduced into SGS, some of which have had an immediate impact, and others expected to be more influential over a longer term. One example that may fall into both categories has been the introduction of a hydrogen-deuterium exchange (HDX) service that,
  • Global pharmaceutical supply chain trends Q4 2016

    Kevin Haehl
    With the advent of another presidential election cycle, we are caught up in a familiar debate about the cost of healthcare. Naturally, the pricing of pharmaceuticals is front and center — even more so than in previous campaign years — due to the recent media firestorm surrounding the exorbitant price increases of some generic medications. But there is another issue, one depriving the U.S. healthcare system of billions of dollars, which is not being addressed in an open forum.
  • Pharma’s Almanac: Nice Insight’s Content Community Goes Live Online

    Dr. Andrew Warmington, Ph .D.
    Over the last 18 months, the Pharma’s Almanac has attracted high-level commentary and strategic analysis content from some of the industry’s most respected executives and operational experts. The online answer to the quarterly publication, PharmasAlmanac.com, is designed to be a platform that inspires opinion, ideas and collaboration. In addition to hosting articles found in print, the site will offer content exclusive to the web.
  • Two Promising Small- Molecule Orphan Drugs In Clinical Trials

    Boobalan Pachaiyappan, Ph.D.
    Ease of molecular synthesis and portfolio diversity enables small molecules to be consistently victorious compared to other drug modalities. A staunch focus on creativity in chemical space and enriched understanding of drug parameters are surefire ways to spur innovation and a concomitant cure.
  • Think Tank Forum

    Nigel Walker
    As the pharmaceutical industry undergoes unprecedented levels of change, there are significant opportunities for the development and formulation of breakthrough medicines that can dramatically improve patient lives. To convert those opportunities into successful new drug products, however, numerous obstacles have yet to be overcome.
  • Perspectives on Product Pricing Strategy and Practice

    Haig Armaghanian, Josh Dunn
    In 2016, two drug-price-related “scandals” ignited near-universal criticism of the pharmaceutical industry, generating angry international headlines sustained by the intense scrutiny of social media. Regardless of the harsh rhetoric and political posturing, drug owners and developers are compelled to understand and consider an amazingly complex set of factors and influences to craft an effective, profitable pricing strategy in response — especially when attempting to introduce a new standard-of-care therapy that has no peer to help with its valuation.
  • Speed-to-Market: Process and Capacity on Demand

    Robert E. Chew
    The business of drug development and manufacturing has fundamentally changed. On the one hand, commercializing and manufacturing new, classleading drugs has become increasingly cost-prohibitive.
  • Finding The Ideal Partner For Your Next Biotherapeutic

    Heather Delage
    Biopharmaceutical companies with portfolios heavily staked in the development of therapeutics that require some form of fermentation — namely many active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), peptides, antibodies and other small molecules — face the challenge of creating medium- and long-term production plans. Building a new bioprocessing facility that is capable of handling the development and manufacturing of complex biotherapeutics can cost anywhere from $50M to $650M, and may require up to four years to complete.
  • Transforming The Pharmaceutical Industry Pipeline with In Silico Approaches

    Cynthia A. Challener Ph.D.
    Most of the revolutions that happened in silico,” says Douglas Krafte, Chief Scientific Officer of Icagen, Inc., “happened in the subfields such as biology and chemistry, not in the fully integrated design and generation of new drugs.”
  • Achieving Successful Treat ment Outcomes through the Delivery of Manufacturing Services

    Janice L. Graff, KaShauna G. Rohlehr, PMP
    In 2015, according to BioPlan Associates the market for biopharmaceuticals was valued at $200 billion and growing at ~14% annually. Ten to 15 new biologic treatments are expected to receive approval each year, and the top products already on the market have annual sales of over $2 billion.
  • New Strategies Required to Meet Changing Needs in the Analytical Services Market

    Magdalena Mejillano, Lijun Duan
    Bioanalytical services accounted for the largest share of the global healthcare analytical testing services market in 2015, reflecting the rising percentage of largemolecule drugs in the pharma industry pipeline — a trend that is expected to continue for the foreseeable future. On the other hand, the batch-release testing segment is expected to grow more than any other segment during the next five years, according to Markets and Markets.
  • Achieving Continuous Downstream Bioprocessing

    Michelle Najera, Ph.D.
    For monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), titers have increased almost 30- fold over a 15-year period.1 In addition, mAbs and other therapeutic biologics represent the fastest growing sector of the entire pharmaceutical market with many pipeline candidates reaching latestage development, including 53 mAbs in phase III trials as of late 2015.
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