Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Global Outsourcing Conference Report

Over the last three days we've been taking part and presenting at the third Global Outsourcing Conference, jointly organized by Xavier University and the US FDA.

Although not the best attended of conferences this year, it proved to be one of the best in terms of content presented and the quality of the invited speakers, including a couple of key note addresses from senior members of US FDA. This resulted in some very interesting and beneficial discussions amongst the attendees, all of whom have taken home some thought provoking material and ideas for implementing positive change in terms of better securing the supply chain, assuring product and patient safety and in optimizing the performance of their extended enterprises.

The conference looked at a wide range of outsourcing and supply chain issues, ranging from the pragmatic management of outsourcing and supply chain management best practices, with a mixture of practical best practices from the pharmaceutical industry and research and experience from a number of leading Universities working in the field (presentations are currently available on the Xavier GOC website).

Of significant interest were the FDA presentations looking at the implications of the recent FDA Safety and Innovation Act (FDASIA - due to be signed into law next month) and the changes that this will have in terms of changes to GMP and GDP regulations.

There was a significant interest in the topic of serialization and ePedigree - which was covered in a number of sessions and signs are that companies are now realizing that rolling these solutions out will be necessary and more difficult than originally envisaged when compared to simpler pilot studies.

Supplier selection, assessment and management were also key topics with the focus on developing partnerships and relationships as the best way of meeting forthcoming regulatory expectations for the management of suppliers.

Business & Decision presented a deep dive session on the future challenges faced by ERP System and Process Owners, looking at the need to integrate with serialization systems, master data management systems, and supply chain partners systems. Acknowledging that many ERP systems were never designed to handle such a level of integration, the session looked at how middleware solutions such as Business Process Management solutions and SOA can be used to better integrate the supply chain.

Outsourcing clearly isn't going away and although some companies are looking to in-source some strategic products and services once again, the issues associated with outsourcing cannot be ignored. Although examples from India and China were much in evidence it was also acknowledged that outsourcing risks do not solely exist in so-called 'emerging economies'

This issues exist not only with product (API, excipients and other starting materials), but also with services such as IT services and it is clear that the US FDA expect companies to better manage their suppliers and supply chain.

For pharmaceutical companies looking to get involved in the debate there is the opportunity to follow the discussion on-line in the LinkedIn "Xavier Pharmaceutical Community".

In summary, the conference provided pharmaceutical companies with a comprehensive list of the topics they will need to be address in the next 1 - 3 years, which now need to be developed into a road map leading to on-going compliance, improved product and patient safety and more efficient and cost-effective supply chain operations.






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