Middle East war disrupts pharma air routes, risks cancer drugs supply

  • Summary

  • Companies

  • War snarls critical drug deliveries to Gulf

  • Drugmakers reroute cargo as Dubai, Doha hubs are hit

  • Cancer drugs face higher supply risk

  • No major shortages yet, industry says

  • Hospitals could face pressure within weeks

LONDON, March 16 (Reuters) - War in the Middle East is disrupting the flow of critical medicines to the Gulf, imperilling supply routes for cancer drugs and other treatments that require refrigeration and forcing companies to reroute flights ​and find overland access into the region, industry executives said.

The conflict, sparked by U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran two weeks ago and broadened by Iranian strikes around the region, ‌has knocked out key air transit hubs and closed shipping routes, snarling the movement of goods for many products from medicines to food and oil.

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While there are few signs yet of major shortages, that could change if the conflict drags on, some executives said. The Gulf relies heavily on imports and some medicines have short shelf lives and need strict cold-chain storage, making lengthy overland shipping less practical.

Executives at Western drugmakers said they were seeking alternative routes into the ​Gulf and trucking some drugs overland from airports like Jeddah and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia. Other options were Istanbul and Oman.

Major airports in the region including Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Doha have ​been closed due to strikes by Iran in response to U.S. and Israeli attacks. Dubai and Doha are major cargo hubs linking Europe with Asia ⁠and Africa, with airlines Emirates and Etihad and logistics firms such as DHL handling temperature-sensitive drugs that must be kept within a narrow range to remain safe and effective.

Wouter Dewulf, a professor at ​the Antwerp Management School, cited industry data showing over a fifth of global air cargo – the main route for critical or life-saving drugs and vaccines – are exposed to Middle East disruption.

One executive cautioned that alternative “cold-chain ​corridors”, or temperature-controlled routes used for sensitive medicines, could not be set up overnight and were not always available.

Another pharmaceutical company executive said it had set up internal teams to prioritise patient-critical shipments, including of cancer treatments, and warned some temperature-controlled shipments could miss connections unless proper storage and handling were secured.

A medical device company executive said the first step was to map shipments already in transit or ready to depart, then decide which pallets needed to be diverted ​and whether new shipments had to be planned.

The executive, who like others spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal operations, said some Europe-Asia cargo that typically move through Dubai or Doha airports ​was being rerouted via China or Singapore. Sea routes were not practical due to longer journey times, as well as closure of the critical Strait of Hormuz by Iran.

“If you have an urgent surgery with a patient waiting for ‌treatment, you ⁠have to choose the faster mode of transport,” the executive said.

Graphic:

HOSPITALS COULD RUN LOW WITHIN WEEKS

Prashant Yadav, senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, said stocks of short shelf-life, temperature-sensitive and more expensive medicines were usually around three months, with cancer drugs, particularly monoclonal antibodies, among those at highest risk.

Delays in delivery of oncology medicines can have dire consequences for patients, who might be forced to restart a course of therapy, or see their cancer worsen.

The disruption was already a problem for some companies, Yadav said, with some customers warning they could run low on supplies within four to six weeks ​if things did not improve.

Over 100 pharma and ​logistics industry participants joined a webinar last week ⁠hosted by Pharma.Aero, a life sciences logistics group, to discuss the Gulf crisis and its supply-chain and transport implications.

Flights in the UAE

INDUSTRY IS COPING FOR NOW

Some logistics providers say the industry is coping for now. Dorothee Becher, in charge of air logistics for healthcare at freight company Kuehne+Nagel (KNIN.S), opens new tab, said carriers were flying into Jeddah, ​Riyadh and Oman and using land routes to reach final markets.

“I do not see any risk yet that the inventory would go dramatically down,” ​she said, adding that healthcare ⁠cargo was being prioritised.

But keeping shipments moving was a constant battle.

Doaa Fathallah, chief operating officer at biopharma logistics company Marken, said cold-chain cargo was getting through, but only with round-the-clock re-routing as airspace restrictions shifted rapidly.

The re-routing means longer transit times and higher fuel costs, driving up transportation fees, she said, as well as use of dry ice to keep medicines cold.

The risks rise for the industry if the disruptions persist, executives said, as supplies ⁠in the Gulf ​and Asia run low.

Shipping snags could also affect products that pose indirect risks to drug supplies including shortages of vial ​stoppers, IV bag plastics and items needed for packaging.

“It’s not always a shortage of the medicine itself,” said David Weeks, who follows the supply chain industry for ratings agency Moody’s. “In some cases, it’s the little stopper on the vial where the dosage ​is extracted.”

Reporting by Maggie Fick in London; Additional reporting by Bhanvi Satija in London; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Bill Berkrot

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Maggie Fick

Thomson Reuters

Maggie is a Britain-based reporter covering the European pharmaceuticals industry with a global perspective. In 2023, Maggie’s coverage of Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk and its race to increase production of its new weight-loss drug helped the Health & Pharma team win a Reuters Journalists of the Year award in the Beat Coverage of the Year category. Since November 2023, she has also been participating in Reuters coverage related to the Israel-Hamas war. Previously based in Nairobi and Cairo for Reuters and in Lagos for the Financial Times, Maggie got her start in journalism in 2010 as a freelancer for The Associated Press in South Sudan.

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