Smart research. Smart business.  
      
      SCUP Report :
 
Table of Contents
 
Summary
Introduction
Market Size, Segments and Growth
World
United States
Europe
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
Markets
Top active pharmaceutical ingredients
Japan
Overview of the Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients Business
World
The Human Dose-Form Pharmaceutical Industry
Consolidation
Top pharmaceutical companies
Generics
The Fine Chemicals Industry
Trends and Opportunities
Chiral pharmaceuticals
Biopharmaceuticals
Harmonization
United States
Structure of the Industry
Drug Approval Processes
New drug products
Generics
Biologics
Current good manufacturing practices (cGMP)
Industry Participants
Pharmaceutical companies
Integrated pharmaceutical companies
Generic pharmaceutical companies
Start-ups and other small research oriented companies
Fine chemical companies
Preclinical and clinical companies
Exclusive/custom manufacturing
Merchant manufacturing
Operating Characteristics
Research and development
Manufacturing
Marketing
Profitability and cost structure
Trends and Opportunities
Critical Factors for Success
Europe
Structure of the Industry
Market Participants
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
Operating Characteristics
Research and development
Manufacturing
Overall characteristics
Biocatalysis and chirality
Peptides
Production output
Economies of scale
Small scale production
Additional services
Role of technology
Differentiation
Marketing and sales
Approach to market
Barriers to entry
Marketing and sales messages and claims
Profitability and cost structure
Government Regulations
Good manufacturing practices (GMP) harmonization
Supplementary protection certificate (SPC)
Registration business
EU enlargement
Prices
Trends and Opportunities
Major trends
Opportunities
Critical Factors for Success
Japan
Structure of the Industry
Large pharmaceutical companies
Pharmaceutical/chemical companies
Fine and specialty chemical companies
Large chemical companies
Companies in the food industry and other industries
Major Participants
Operating Characteristics
Research and development
API manufacturers that are also dose-form pharmaceutical producers
API manufacturers that emphasize APIs and intermediates supply rather than dose-form manufacture
Manufacturing
Marketing
Profitability and cost structure
Government Regulations
Trends and Opportunities
Critical Factors for Success
India
Structure of the Industry
Major Participants
Government Regulations
Trends and Opportunities
Critical Factors for Success
China
Structure of the Industry
Major Participants
Trends and Opportunities
Critical Factors for Success
   
  Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients
   
  Fred Hajduk and Hossein Janshekar and Kazuteru Yokose
  Published August 2004
  SCUP Home   |     View Report   |     Purchase      
   
 
  Abstract
   
 

This report focuses on human dose-form active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) from the viewpoint of the fine chemical producer—its main focus is on noncaptive use. The geographic coverage is centered on the United States, Europe and Japan, but our overall estimate of the market includes other areas.

The world market for human dose-form active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) is estimated to have been $52 billion in 2003 and is expected to grow to $70 billion in 2008, a 6% average annual growth rate. The largest new product opportunities for noncaptive API manufacturers will result from the loss of patent protection by human pharmaceutical dose-form products and increased outsourcing of difficult or hazardous chemical synthesis steps, bulk intermediates and active ingredients by the pharmaceutical industry.

The world pharmaceutical market has continued to grow over the past decade. In 2003, it grew by an average of 11% with respect to 2002 (dollar value, dose-form level). A further expansion of 6.2% annual compound growth is forecast for 2002-2008. Ten strategic markets accounted for approximately 85% of growth in the ethical pharma market (pharmaceutical market excluding OTC medications) from 2002 to 2003-Italy, Spain, France, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, Mexico, United States, Canada and Brazil.

The human pharmaceutical sector accounts for about 75% of the market worldwide and is composed of some 1,500-2,000 individual products. While aggregate market production and consumption information does not exist for all these products and industry segments, a top-down API market consumption analysis is possible using dose-form sales estimates for the various market segments.

The API industry continues to be extremely fragmented, but consolidation is occurring among its major customers—branded dose-form and generic pharmaceutical companies—in the United States and Europe. These companies have followed the example of those in other industries and are increasingly outsourcing their manufacturing operations. The percentage of manufacturing that is outsourced among the branded pharmaceutical companies varies by company. Some manufacture all their products in-house, while others outsource synthesis steps, intermediates, bulk active ingredients or even final dose-form products.

In the generic dose-form sector, while U.S. generic drug makers typically do not produce APIs, the trend toward increased acquisitions and industry consolidation will lead to fewer customers for API suppliers. Generic drug makers will remain prime customers within the bulk active ingredient market, especially with the large number of products losing patent protection in the coming decade. However, the higher-value business of custom manufacturing for the pharmaceutical multinational corporations (PMNCs), has become a more attractive market for the top fine chemical producers that are in a position to offer a variety of services to the PMNCs.

As the pharmaceutical industry looks increasingly to biotechnology for its pipeline products, a new generation of bulk biopharmaceutical chemicals is entering the market. The business model used by some emerging biotech companies is also to rely on outsourcing, including outsourcing of manufacturing. While the next generation of biotech companies can be a new source of customers for API manufacturers, opportunities are currently limited because few biotech products have reached commercialization, those that are commercially available are primarily captively produced, and to date most outsourcing of biotech products is for clinical supply lots. In contrast to the multistep synthesis of chemically derived drugs, biopharmaceuticals are typically produced in a one-step fermentation that PMNCs are unlikely to outsource because of concerns about leakage of proprietary expertise. Much of the outsourcing that the pharmaceutical industry does continues to be for isolated intermediate chemical compounds, and it remains the norm for the final synthesis step to be done in-house.

The pharmaceutical industry is under great pressure to raise critical mass in R&D in order to increase its development potential and improve drug pipelines. A number of scale factors have become important in past years in this respect. One of them is the overall size of the marketing organization. Another factor is the need to master new enabling technologies, such as genetic engineering, high-throughput screening, bioinformatics and structural chemistry. These technologies are cost-intensive and their cost is constant and fairly independent of the company's size. Consolidation in the pharmaceutical industry has therefore continued in the past three years with a number of major deals.

Regulatory changes will have a significant impact on API manufacturing. Supplementary protection certification (SPC) regulations in European Union (EU) countries will encourage API manufacturers that supply U.S. generic drug markets to manufacture outside the region. Generic drug companies typically require samples years in advance of patent expiration, but SPC regulations prohibit plants in EU countries from supplying any drug for qualifying and registration purposes before the drug has lost patent protection. India and China are the most attractive alternative production sites, as well as the United States, where producers can be close to customers. In the United States, API producers are allowed to manufacture patented drugs prior to the patent expiration as a result of the Hatch-Waxman Act, which was a compromise between generic drug companies and brand-name pharmaceutical companies, enabling generic companies to market their products immediately upon patent expiration and extending the patents of the drug innovators to compensate for regulatory delays at the FDA.

After the pharmaceutical manufacturers, the fine chemicals industry is the largest supplier of active pharmaceutical ingredients (both standard and custom) and of intermediates for the pharmaceutical market. Pharmaceutical companies are the largest customers of the fine chemicals industry. It is estimated that up to 67% of worldwide sales of the fine chemical industry sector go to the pharmaceutical industry.

The fine chemicals industry has experienced a wave of consolidation in the past several years. The industry is still extremely fragmented; in some segments profitability is low and in some cases profits are not enough to cover the cost of capital in an industry that is capital intensive. This situation, combined with slowing growth in some areas and with the desire by some suppliers to offer a broader range of services to the pharmaceutical industry and/or to expand market reach, has prompted many companies to join forces. This consolidation trend is accompanied by an increasing focusing of fine chemical suppliers on the life sciences market. A number of companies in the past few years have signaled this intention through divestment of business divisions not targeted at the life science arena.

Demand for chiral chemicals and intermediates from the pharmaceutical industry has been rapidly increasing. The $470 billion pharmaceutical industry accounts for the majority of the market for chiral chemicals. Although most large pharmaceutical companies have established chiral technology including bioprocessing to produce chiral compounds, outsourcing to contract manufacturers is a growing trend in the manufacture of chiral chemicals in this industry. The market for chiral chemicals is increasing at an annual rate of 8-10%, and worldwide revenues are expected to reach $15 billion by 2008.

 
Company Information
 

Copyright © 2008 SRI Consulting. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Contact Us