Title: Canadian Blood Services
1Canadian Blood Services
- Dr. Graham Sher, CEO
- Canadian Blood Services
- WFH Global Forum, Montréal
- 2005-09-26
2- Overview
- Background and trends
- CBS Strategic Plan for Plasma Protein Products
- Surplus proteins from Canadian plasma
3- Background and Trends
- In September 1998, CBS assumed responsibility for
purchasing and distributing about 30 different
plasma protein products - The product list was grandfathered to CBS
- Albumin/pentastarch
- IVIG
- FVIII, FIX, VWF/FVIII
- rFVIIa, porcine FVIII, FEIBA
- Hyperimmunes
- Speciality
- C1-esterase inhibitor, ATIII, fibrinogen, Protein
C - FXI, FXIII, prothrombin complex
4- Background and Trends (Continued)
- Recombinant clotting factors (Factor VIII, IX and
VIIa) are also part of the CBS product list - In 2004-2005, half of the CBS budget was for
plasma protein product costs - Recombinant proteins accounted for 42 of plasma
proteins costs in 2004-2005 - Product utilization has continued to increase for
most product types
5Background and Trends (Continued) Growth in
Demand for Plasma Protein Products
6- Background and Trends (Continued)
- CBS and Héma-Québec collect and ship
approximately 190,000 litres of plasma a year for
fractionation into IVIG and albumin by Talecris
(previously Bayer) - CBS and Héma-Québec plasma is pooled jointly for
processing - Canadian plasma currently meets about 24 of IVIG
needs the balance is provided through
commercial IVIG (US plasma-derived)
7- Background and Trends (Continued)
- Global changes have impacted the plasma products
industry - Increased use of recombinant FVIII and FIX,
reduced revenue from plasma-derived clotting
factors - Reduced demand and price for albumin
- Fluctuating IVIG supply and pricing
- Plasma collection has been scaled back, and
throughput reduced by 3 million litres a year
8- Background and Trends (Continued)
- An already concentrated industry is consolidating
further - Top 5 in the industry account for 58 of sales
globally - CSL purchased ZLB and Aventis Behring
- Grifols purchased Alpha Therapeutic
- Bayer has sold its plasma business
- American Red Cross has exited contract
fractionation
9- Background and Trends (Continued)
- Canada is a small market in the global
marketplace - e.g. about 4 of global sales for IVIG
- CBS is the monopoly provider of these products to
Canadian hospitals - Security of supply is a safety issue, and a risk
management approach is warranted
10- CBS Plasma Protein Products Strategic Plan
- In 2003 CBS initiated the development of a
strategic - approach for plasma protein products
- Launch (the Syntegration event) Sept 03
- Drafting of Strategic Plan content Jan-Mar 04
- Consultations with Key Stakeholders Apr-May 04
- Board Approval of Strategic Plan June 04
- Development of Operational Plan (current)
- Endorsement from Corporate Members
- Execution
11- Strategic Plan (Continued)
- Broad-based consultation in Sept 2003
- Members of CBS Board and CBS Executive Management
Team - Provincial and Territorial representatives
- Healthcare professionals
- International experts
- Representatives of patient groups
- Fractionation industry
- Regulatory agencies
12- Strategic Plan (continued)
- What must CBS do now and over the next 5 years
to ensure that Canada has access to a safe,
secure, and cost-effective supply of plasma for
fractionation, plasma products, and their
alternatives? - A draft strategic plan was developed by CBS from
the advice provided at the broad-based
consultation - The draft plan was reviewed by CBS executive
management and then by CBS Board of Directors
13- Strategic Plan (Continued)
- CBS also reviewed the draft strategic plan with
- Provincial and Territorial funders
- Canadian Hemophilia Society
- Association of Hemophilia Clinic Directors of
Canada - Canadian Immunodeficiencies Patient Organization
- National Liaison Committee
- CBS also met with plasma product manufacturers to
update information on plasma fractionation and
industry trends
14Strategic Plan (Continued)
Product Selection Process Brands and categories
Utilization Management Monitoring and optimizing
use
Demand Forecasting Projecting requirements
Plasma Products Supply Chain - Seven
Strategic Directions
Canadian Sufficiency in Plasma Products How
much product from Canadian plasma
Collections Collecting the plasma required
Manufacturing Fractionating the plasma into
products
Inventory and Distribution Maintain inventory
levels and ship products to hospitals
15- Strategic Plan (continued)
- Product Selection Process
- Establishing a decision-making mechanism to add
or remove products - Defining roles and responsibilities
- Patient and physician stakeholder participation
- Utilization Management
- Supporting initiatives to ensure optimal product
use - Continuing support for product guidelines
development - Demand Forecasting
- Projecting product requirements for each province
12-18 months in advance
16- Strategic Plan (continued)
- Canadian Sufficiency in Plasma Products
- Defining a target for IVIG made from Canadian
plasma - Shifting from self-sufficiency to 40 and
security of supply - Collections
- Integrating the plans for plasma collection to
meet the 40 target with the requirements for red
cells, platelets and plasma for transfusion
17- Strategic Plan (continued)
- Manufacturing
- CBS will continue to send plasma for contract
fractionation - A longer term objective will be to split the
plasma fractionation contract between two
fractionators - Extracting other proteins from the Canadian
plasma pool will maximize the benefit to Canadian
patients - Examine the possibilities for surplus proteins
such as factor VIII - Inventory and Distribution
- Update inventory and distribution management
software - Evaluate and optimize inventory targets
18- Surplus Proteins from Canadian Plasma
- Factor VIII supply and demand in 1993
- 77.8 Million IU FVIII (plasma-derived and
recombinant) issued in Canada in 1993-1994 - Recombinant FVIII introduced in June 1993
- 21.7 Million IU rFVIII issued that year
- Factor VIII supply and demand in 2004
- 130.2 Million IU rFVIII issued
- 4.3 Million IU plasma-derived Factor VIII (3.2)
19- Surplus Proteins from Canadian Plasma
- Historically, Canadian plasma has consisted of
- Recovered plasma from whole blood collection,
frozen within 15 hours (RP-15) - Recovered plasma from whole blood collection
frozen within 72 hours (RP) - Apheresis plasma frozen within 8 hours (Source)
- Currently plasma shipped for fractionation is RP
- Increased time to freezing reflects high
proportion of mobile clinics in current whole
blood collection operations - Apheresis plasma is preferred for transfusion
20Surplus Proteins from Canadian Plasma
239,000 litres Plasma shipped for Fractionation
in 1993-94
21Surplus Proteins from Canadian Plasma
192,000 litres Plasma shipped for Fractionation
in 2004-05
22- Surplus Proteins from Canadian Plasma
- Changes are imminent
- Canadian Blood Services will be switching to the
buffy coat production method, beginning with a
pilot project that commences this Fall - Impact on cryoprecipitate yield and
characteristics, if any, cannot be established
until pilot project has begun
23- Surplus Proteins from Canadian Plasma
- Potential use of Canadian cryoprecipitate
- Continue our discussions with CHS and WFH
- South Africa (National Bioproducts Institute) a
potential fractionator - Initial meeting at PPTA Plasma forum in June
- First conference call with all parties in July
- WFH, CHS, WHO, NBI, IPFA, CBS and Héma-Québec
24- Surplus Proteins from Canadian Plasma
- CBS currently examining
- Legal, liability and ethical questions pertinent
to Fraction IV and cryo - Technical cryo manufacture/collection questions
with Talecris - Plasma collection constraints (ie. time to
freezing) - CBS will continue to explore all options to
support this initiative.
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