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Supply Chain Vulnerabilities in First-Line Treatments for Sexually Transmitted Infections: Implications for U.S. Public Health Preparedness.

Garcia, C. Y.; Leung, W.; Shirley, A. M.; Zhao, I.; Allan-Blitz, L.-T.

2026-05-07 pharmacology and therapeutics
10.64898/2026.05.06.26352546 medRxiv
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ObjectivesTo evaluate supply-chain vulnerabilities affecting medications essential for treating sexually transmitted infection in the United States and identify disruption mechanisms that may predispose these therapies to shortages. MethodsWe conducted a qualitative, structured supply-chain vulnerability assessment of first-line medications for five priority sexually transmitted pathogens recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization: azithromycin, doxycycline, ceftriaxone, benzathine penicillin G, metronidazole, tinidazole, acyclovir, and cefixime. Using a predefined framework derived from pharmaceutical supply-chain disruption literature, we evaluated 13 disruption categories spanning raw material sourcing, active pharmaceutical ingredient production, manufacturing, distribution, market dynamics, information systems, and post-distribution loss mechanisms. Each category was assessed using four binary indicators and classified as relevant when at least two criteria were satisfied. ResultsMultiple disruption domains applied across the drug set. Recurrent vulnerabilities included geographically concentrated active pharmaceutical ingredient production, limited manufacturing redundancy in low-margin generic markets, manufacturing constraints affecting sterile injectable products, reliance on consolidated distribution networks, and susceptibility to demand surges and information-system disruptions. All eight drugs exhibited at least one regulatory or market signal consistent with potential supply vulnerability, including documented shortages, product discontinuations, or limited manufacturer participation. ConclusionsSupply-chain vulnerabilities were identified across multiple first-line sexually transmitted infection therapies, indicating that disruption risk is not confined to a single drug. There is a need for policy interventions to strengthen supply-chain resilience, including diversification of active pharmaceutical ingredient sourcing and distribution networks, as well as incentives for sustainable generic production.

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