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India needs to step up more as a strategic innovator in the global supply chain

Express Pharma

|

June 2025

In a free wheeling conversation, US-based Hari Kiran Chereddi, MD, HRV Global Life Sciences explains to Viveka Roychowdhury that “where biotech meets geopolitics, compliance is a currency” and therefore the future of pharma supply chains is a “distributed orchestration, rather than centralised ownership”

India needs to step up more as a strategic innovator in the global supply chain

HRV Global Life Sciences specialises in ‘virtual Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API) manufacturing’, what does the term entail? Is it like a super CDMO, which contracts out manufacturing to mid-sized pharma companies in India and then meets the sourcing requirements of global MNC pharma?

We're just not transforming typical pharma manufacturing. I do not want to put ourselves in a box of saying we're a CDMO or a CMO or all those terms that are out there today. We're basically reimagining the whole manufacturing setup. Unlike traditional companies that rely on owning and operating factories, we've activated a big network of underutilised globally compliant, be it USFDA, EU GMP or the likes, API production facilities across the country. The average utilisation of USFDA-approved manufacturers in the country is about 50-70 per cent, as per an AT Kearney-OPPI report.

We pull all together into a single tech-enabled platform, allowing us to deliver regulatory-grade APIs across countries without the need to invest in a physical infrastructure. The model is not outsourcing, more an orchestration, where we have led with compliance, filing our own US Drug Master Files (DMFs), Certificates of Suitability (CEPs) and managing global regulatory audits as well.

As a case in point, in the last nine months alone, we have filed about 10 or 11 US DMFs and three CEPs at a pace rarely matched by even large legacy manufacturers. What sets us apart is that we sponsor the regulatory journey and the product journey of some of what we offer, owning the quality and compliance from dossier creation to delivery.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Flexotherm Heating Tapes & Cords

Typical Applications of Heating Tapes and Cords in Industrial Solvent Handling

time to read

1 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

DRIVING INDIA'S INNOVATION EDGE

Pharma leaders come together to highlight Bengaluru's R&D strength, tech ecosystem, and talent pool to power India Pharma Inc's shift from generics to innovation and global leadership

time to read

16 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Al compass: Transforming pharma commercialisation

As the world evolves at a rapid pace, pharma companies are embracing smarter approaches, leveraging Al across nearly every aspect of commercialisation, from market forecasting and personalised marketing to dynamic pricing and beyond. In this article, Neha Aathavale takes the pulse of the industry to explore who is taking note and how companies are beginning to put Al into action in their commercial operations

time to read

7 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

PRIME NEO: New age doors from Gandhi Automation

Gandhi Automations presents the multi-composites, high-performance door PRIME NEO for clean environments. Complete Washable, Greater Sealing and Pressure Resistant.

time to read

1 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Unani Medicine: At crossroads of tradition and modernity

Manufacturers, academic institutions and research councils are working together to elevate Unani medicine through clinical validation and policy alignment with international standards, finds Swati Rana

time to read

7 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Single-Use Technologies in Biologics Manufacturing: Benefits, Challenges, and Growing Demand

The biopharmaceutical industry is increasingly adopting single-use technology (SUT) to achieve flexibility, cost efficiency, and faster time-to-market. Compared with stainless steel systems, SUT reduces capital investment, eliminates cleaning and sterilization steps, lowers contamination risk, and shortens production timelines.

time to read

1 min

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Sustainable packaging with Romaco and Liveo Research

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time to read

3 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

With India soon to be three times the population of the EU, it makes perfect sense to have manufacturing here

As part of Sweden's Focus Asia programme, a high-level SME delegation recently visited India to strengthen bilateral ties and explore collaborations across sectors including pharma, biotech and others. Building on the momentum of the \"Time for Sweden\" event, the visit underscored Sweden's commitment to innovation, sustainability, and co-creation with India. Among the delegation was Emil Alexander Byström, CEO of SpinChem AB, who in an interaction with Kalyani Sharma shared his insights on how advanced Swedish technologies like biocatalysis and the company's patented Rotating Bed Reactor (RBR) can accelerate India's pharma and biotech innovation journey while supporting sustainable growth.

time to read

3 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Cell therapy's next chapter: Industry embraces in-vivo innovation

Nikhil C Bhanumathi, Principal Clinical Lead, Thermo Fisher Scientific highlights that cell therapy is entering a bold new phase in 2025 as the industry shifts from complex, lab-based ex vivo CAR-T to faster, more accessible in vivo CAR-T innovations. This approach promises to expand access, lower costs, and potentially tackle solid tumors and autoimmune diseases

time to read

4 mins

October 2025

Express Pharma

Express Pharma

Research misconduct ...can delay meaningful and reliable discoveries

Dr Gráinne McNamara, Research Integrity/Publication Ethics Manager, S. Karger AG explores how research misconduct, peer review fraud slow down pharma research. Of particular concern to India is the fact that India-based researchers constitute 5 per cent of articles in life sciences retracted between 1976-2023. India-based researchers also have one of the highest rates of retraction relative to the overall publication output. Over an email exchange with Viveka Roychowdhury, she details how publishers are now deploying AI tools, some of which contributed to the problem in the first place, to detect and avert fraudulent research submissions

time to read

6 mins

October 2025

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