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Outsourcing and the supply chain
October 11, 2017
By: Emil W. Ciurczak
Independent Pharmaceuticals Professional
“If you love something, let it go.” This is the wisdom of our elders and advice column writers. In manufacturing, producing almost any “widget” (cars, planes, moon rockets, TVs, etc.), it has long been the practice to use sub-contractors to produce the smaller pieces and the “mother plant” assemble and distribute the finished goods. I remember John Glenn being asked what he was thinking while waiting for lift-off. He answered, “I was sitting on a million pounds of explosive fuel, in a ship made from a million components, each supplied by the lowest bidder.” The emerging paradigm for pharmaceutical manufacturing is to have more and more of the “pieces” of the final product fabricated off-campus. In the “good old days” (1950s-80s), the excipients were, of course, bought from a supplier. Can you imagine a major pharma company with a farm, where they harvest milk for lactose or grains for starch? The difference between then and now is that we knew from whence came the materials. Talc was a product of Alabama, cornstarch was from our mid-west, most APIs were made in-house or by a nearby contractor, etc. We still purchase these excipients and APIs, but now, we are called upon to trust other Agencies, other than FDA, USDA, or EMA, in countries where the agencies seldom have the personnel, force of law, or resources to monitor production processes—raw materials, intermediates, or finished products. In the past—1940s through the 1990s—the way in which we cleared these raw materials for use in our products was two-fold:
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