managing drug shortages: a buyer/vendor perspective

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Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective Allen Sutherland St. Joseph’s Hospital Phoenix, AZ

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Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective. Allen Sutherland St. Joseph’s Hospital Phoenix, AZ. Drug Shortage Defined. “A supply issue that affects how the pharmacy prepares or dispenses a drug product or influences patient care when prescribers must use an alternative agent.” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor PerspectiveAllen SutherlandSt. Joseph’s HospitalPhoenix, AZ

Page 2: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective
Page 3: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Drug Shortage Defined

“A supply issue that affects how the pharmacy prepares or dispenses a drug product or influences patient care when prescribers must use an alternative agent.” –American Journal of Health-System Pharmacists. 2009; 66:1399-406

Page 4: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Factors Contributing to Disruptions in the Supply Chain• Supply Chain defined:

▫Sources of raw material, manufacturers, regulators, prime vendors, group purchasing organizations, end-user health care systems

Page 5: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Raw Material

•Climatic and environmental conditions▫Political upheaval▫Animal diseases contaminating tissue from

which raw materials are extracted▫Plant growth retarded▫Degradation or contamination of raw

materials during transportation, harvesting, or storage

Page 6: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Manufacturing • FDA (Food and Drug Administration) enforcement

actions concerning noncompliance with current good manufacturing procedures (cGMPs).▫Shift of resources from maintenance of equipment

and facilities to research and development.▫Loss of manufacturer personnel experienced in

production and compliance issues as a result of company mergers.

▫cGMP-related problems with sub-contractors who supply products to multiple pharmaceutical manufacturers.

▫Limited FDA resources for timely inspections of sites.

Page 7: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective
Page 8: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Voluntary Recalls

•Generally temporary and occur as a result of a minor lapse in manufacturing procedures that would not be subject to FDA legal action.

•Usually affect specific lots.•Conducted because of lack of assurance

that the product is safe or for reasons not related to safety (technical issues).

Page 9: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Change in Product Formulation or ManufacturerTransitioning from one product to another

-Example: Albuterol MDIs containing chlorofluorocarbons to MDSs containing hydrofluoroalkanes.

Montreal Protocol-Global WarmingThe interim replacements for CFCs are hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), which deplete stratospheric ozone, but to a much lesser extent than CFCs. On September 21, 2007, approximately 200 countries agreed to accelerate the elimination of hydrochlorofluorocarbons entirely by 2020 in a United Nations-sponsored Montreal summit. Developing nations were given until 2030. Many nations agreed with the accelerated phase out schedule.

Page 10: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Restricted Drug Product Distribution and Allocation•Manufacturer places restrictions on

available limited supplies. This may require direct purchases from the manufacturer or a specialty distributor.

•Manufacturer limits the availability of a specific drug product. Only selected suppliers and end-users can obtain product.

Page 11: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective
Page 12: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Product Decisions and Economics•Based on availability of generic products,

market size, patent expiration, drug-approval status, regulatory compliance requirements, manufacturers temporarily or permanently reduce quantities of a certain drug product (insufficient financial return).

•Manufacturers are not required by the FDA of a drug continuation unless it is sole source or medically necessary.

Page 13: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective
Page 14: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Manufacturing Mergers

Often result in decisions to narrow the focus of product lines or move a production line to a new facility, resulting in delayed availability or discontinuation.

Page 15: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Inventory Practices•“Just-in-time” inventory

management (used in manufacturing, distributing, and health systems) reduces the cost of inventory on hand and optimizes cash flow.

•Some use inventory management strategies that minimize end-of-quarter or end-of-year product inventories or limit shipments based on yearly quotas.

Page 16: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective
Page 17: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Demand•New indication is

approved for an existing drug product

•Usage patterns change in response to new therapeutic guidelines

•Disease outbreak

Page 18: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Tem

p

out

Page 19: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Nontraditional Distributors

Obtain product in short supply for the purpose of reselling them to end users who are unable to obtain them through normal supply channels (Grey Market).

Page 20: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Natural Disasters

•Fires, hurricanes, tornadoes, floods may compromise drug product supplies▫Damage to manufacturing facilities in

Puerto Rico in 1998▫Hurricanes Katrina and Rita (2005)—Areas

affected by both an increased need of medication and the inability to obtain them

Page 21: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

ACTIONS: Buyers• Is the product “Temp-Out”

▫ Call wholesaler to see when product will be available for ordering

▫ Transfers can be done between wholesalers• Determine how long shortage/backorder will last

▫ Short-Term▫ Long-Term

• Borrowing from other facilities (begin with IHN-sister facilities)

• Is the product allocated by manufacturer or wholesaler▫ Purchase from both manufacturer (if possible) and wholesaler

• Non-stocked items▫ Item not on contract or rarely used▫ Call rep to see if drug is available

• Drug discontinuation▫ Convey message to clinical pharmacist for alternatives

Page 22: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Buyers: When to involve clinical pharmacist/director•Product on Long-Term backorder

▫Clinical coordinator will substitute product according to pharmacy practice guidelines

•Product Discontinuation▫Clinical coordinator will notify physicians and

departments affected•Product Shortages/spotty inventory

▫Clinical coordinator will have a substitution ready in the event a facility is unable to obtain enough product for day by day usage (allocation, unavailable from wholesaler)

Page 23: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Five Dimensions of the Buyer-Supplier Relationship• Trust

▫ Personal and organizational• Communication

▫ Effective communication can enhance level of coordination, satisfaction, commitment levels and performance

• Interpersonal Relationship▫ Personal relationships play a significant role and critical

for effective business• Cooperation

▫ Achieve mutual and individual goals jointly (based upon personal trust)

• Power-dependence▫ Significant impact on buyer-supplier relationships and

performance

Page 24: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

ACTIONS:Vendors•COMMUNICATION IS THE KEY!!

*Vendors should be communicating with buyers on a bi-monthly basis with regard to product availability.

▫Notify Buyer of any backorders right away Buyer can stock up or order direct

▫If drug is on allocation, some may be able to over-allocate on an “as needed” basis, depending on usage

▫Notify Buyer if clinical pharmacist should be involved

Page 25: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Overall Communicaiton

•Buyer/Vendor▫Make yourself known to one another▫Your drug rep is here for you so you may

continue to provide quality patient care•Buyer/Clinical Pharmacist, Director

▫Substitution of product if needed•Buyer/Buyer

▫Monthly meetings should be set up as a form of communications to discuss shortages and other buying issues

Page 26: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Resolving Problems

• Manufacturer does not accept direct orders

• Storage• Over-budget (WAC pricing)• Manufacturer will not over-allocate• Cannot get in touch with the sales rep

Page 27: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Conclusion

Drug shortages have always occurred. Recent increases in the frequency and duration have a bigger impact on healthcare.

Buyers need to establish a proactive process of preventing, identifying, assessing, and enduring shortages without compromising patient care.This necessitates a strong relationship with vendors/manufacturers in obtaining the product needed.

Page 28: Managing Drug Shortages: A Buyer/Vendor Perspective

Recommended Buyer Websites

•FDA.gov

•ASHP.org

•PharmacyPurchasing.com