Every year more than half of the clinical trial drugs manufactured never reach patients. These unused supplies, known as clinical finished goods (CFG), represent wasted medicine and wasted money. Since clinical trial supply typically accounts for 15% to 30% of total trial costs, high levels of CFG waste put significant pressure on both budgets and operations.
To better understand this challenge, Tenthpin conducted a first-of-its-kind benchmarking study with 7 major pharma companies. The goal was to:
In this blog, we will show you the results of our study and what this means for Life Sciences companies across the industry.
The industry standard definition for the CFG waste percentage calculation is:
The number of patient kit units which did not get dispensed to patients divided by the total number of manufactured (packaged) kits per the study.
This calculation captures expired kits during the study, as well as those on hand at the end of the study.
Using this standard, Figure 1 shows that the pharma company average percentage for CFG waste ranges from 52% to approximately 69%. It is important to note that for all the pharma companies, various efforts to reduce their CFG waste levels are in progress. This is happening primarily through tools and point solutions covering data analysis, management oversight, and planning capabilities.
The benchmarking effort also collected cost figures and more granular CFG waste level data across a range of categories including trial phase, drug type, and therapeutic area. This level of detail is valuable in pinpointing more specific opportunities for improving CFG waste performance.
Clinical studies are known for their unpredictability. Patient enrollment rates and depot inventory stock levels often diverge significantly from initial study forecasts. In addition to this inherent unpredictability, numerous other variables can contribute to increased levels of CFG waste within a study.
The benchmark companies identified several root causes behind high waste, spanning both internal and external aspects of their clinical supply operations:
With the benchmark companies underway with various efforts in technology, processes, and data integration to improve their CFG waste performance, some efforts have been working better than others. Below is a sample of these initiatives and successes:
The average CFG waste percentage targets the pharma companies hope to achieve within the next 5 years range from 25% to 45%. This represents a significant improvement over the current levels of performance.
A few of the planned approaches from the pharma companies to achieving these CFG waste target levels are:
The benchmark results show clearly: CFG waste levels are too high, and many existing efforts to reduce them have delivered mixed or unconfirmed results. But pharma companies are beginning to chart a path forward, and momentum for measurable improvement is building.
Success will require moving beyond isolated fixes to a structured, inclusive, and progressive journey anchored in the following four priorities:
One: Standardize reporting and metrics
Reliable, real-time CFG waste data (down to category and dollarized levels) is the foundation for identifying waste early and forecasting end-of-study outcomes.
Two: Sharpen demand signals
Patient enrollment forecast accuracy is the single most impactful driver of waste. Measuring its accuracy and tightening collaboration between clinical operations and clinical supply is essential.
Three: Adopt advanced supply chain techniques
Greater agility through smaller lot sizes, supply pooling, just-in-time labeling, and decentralized inventory management can reduce buffers without risking shortages.
Four: Leverage AI and analytics with a value lens
Further investments in predictive tools, digital twins, and scenario modeling should be tied directly to measurable improvements in waste performance.
Ultimately, cutting CFG waste is about more than efficiency. Every avoided wasted kit means more resources to invest in new therapies to clinical trial patients.