epcis - TraceLink
Transcription
epcis - TraceLink
EPCIS: The Standards, Supply Chain Implications, and Solution Provider Expertise Introduction The Electronic Product Code Information System (EPCIS) is playing an increasingly pivotal role in the life sciences supply chain: the EPCIS information standard is a candidate to meet compliance requirements in several markets; and more companies are beginning to rely on EPCIS for internal serialized data communications between levels of their organizations. For supply chain companies operating in today’s complex and regulated environment, being able to utilize and interoperate with EPCIS is becoming a critical part of doing business. TraceLink executives have been integrally involved with the development of EPCIS guidelines for use within life sciences, providing regulatory and technical expertise in four EPCIS-related GS1 working groups. There is currently no EPCIS certification that is relevant to life sciences guidelines but a DSCSA-applicable one is expected in 2015, and TraceLink will complete certification upon its release. The TraceLink solution supports the use of EPCIS between internal systems and trade partners at the packaging line, enterprise, and network levels, offering flexible integration and data translation and transport capabilities. TraceLink’s network solution allows customers to seamlessly exchange data between both their own systems and with trade partners regardless of format discrepancies or differing transport preferences, allowing them to seamlessly achieve both business efficiencies and partner interoperability. 2 EPCIS Information and Interface Standards The Electronic Product Code Information System (EPCIS) was developed by GS1 to enable event exchange between systems and trade partners. It is industry-agnostic, and currently used to capture and exchange serial numbers in apparel, equipment, electronic, and food industries, among others. EPCIS specifies two standards: information and interface. The information standard informs the format and content of how information is exchanged between companies and systems, while the interface standard specifies the method of data interchange, or how information moves between systems and companies. Overall, the two standards dictate structure and method. Information standard The information standard provides the what, where, why, and when about serialized events through an xml schema and a core business vocabulary. The xml schema defines the structure for communicating different kinds of serialized events, such as object, aggregation, and transformation. The business vocabulary provides a standard nomenclature for how to express the types of events that are occurring in business steps and disposition. What was the business process in which the event occurred? It helps convey all key functions that happen in your warehouse and across your supply chain. The vocabulary also gives you a business transaction type that you may want to reference, such as a purchase order or invoice number, and source and destination types. It provides a way to include data that is part of your event, like the ‘from’ and ‘to’ parties in shipping events. FORMATS: PML, XML, Extended EPCIS FORMATS: XML, Extended EPCIS TRANSPORTS: SFTP, AS2, SOAP, Manual Upload, HTTP Post TRANSPORTS: SFTP, AS2, SOAP, Manual Upload, HTTP Post or Java .API or Net .API over REST Packaging Line ERP/WMS US Packaging Line ERP/WMS EMEA Packaging Line ERP/WMS S. AMERICA Packaging Line Packaging APAC Overall, the information standard provides a common framework for trade partners to interoperate and understand what each piece of information means. It enables integration of operations between both partners and systems. Interface standard The interface standard defines capture and query, the mechanisms by which information is either input or sent between systems, and then requested from them. There are specific choreography and transmission methods for both. EPCIS and Supply Chain Regulations Although EPCIS event exchange is occurring amongst some Life Sciences companies, the EPCIS capture and query mechanisms are not generally being leveraged by the industry to meet compliance requirements. Because businesses already have established ways of moving data between each other and established infrastructures (AS2 and FTP), there has not been a movement to introduce EPCIS as an interface standard. The information standard, however, is being considered by both the United States and Brazil. In the United States, some early adopters have begun to exchange EPCIS events using existing B2B infrastructures. Because the defined GS1 standard is industry-agnostic, GS1 typically appoints industry-specific working groups to address particular needs when the standard is under consideration to address regulatory requirements. Within Life Sciences, there is a public policy working group that tracks all regulations and a technical working group that focuses on the law and considers how the industry might leverage EPCIS to meet its requirements. FORMATS: XML, Extended EPCIS, EDI 856 ASN TraceLink-supported Formats & Transports at the Packaging Line, Enterprise, and Network Levels Tracelink Customer serialization event repository TRANSPORTS: FTP, AS2, SOAP, Manual Upload, Web Portal, HTTP Post Trade Partner Government Trade Partner Government Trade Partner 3 The technical group looks at the details of the law against the standard, including what additional fields would need to be incorporated and how and when the law requires this data to be exchanged. In the U.S. The GS1 US Healthcare working group, Rx Secure Supply Chain, looked at DSCSA requirements and different use cases. Since DSCSA requires an interoperable data exchange format, they considered how to use EPCIS extension points to insert required data fields. They created Implementation Guideline: Applying GS1 Standards to US Pharmaceutical Supply Chain Business Processes for the Drug Supply Chain Security Act and Traceability. This guideline specifically details all extension fields and when they would be used to meet the requirements of the law. The working group then provided the guideline to industry to illustrate what sending and receiving data via EPCIS would look like, and how they might meet DSCSA serialization requirements and allow companies to interoperate. The guideline is very focused on data formats and does not prescribe how the data is exchanged. TraceLink played a critical role in helping to define this GS1 Healthcare US guideline, contributing use cases, providing an understanding of how the law works, and helping to draft the xml schema. TraceLink has also commercially deployed this standard, processing nearly 70,000 EPCIS shipment transactions – each with commission, aggregation, and shipping event data – in a 30 month period. In Brazil A similar process is currently underway in Brazil, and TraceLink is playing a very active role as part of the Health Subcommittee for GS1 Brazil. There are just two document authors for Brazilian Medicine Traceability using GS1 EPCIS, the Brazil guideline: a GS1 representative, and a TraceLink representative who is serving as the technical editor. TraceLink developed and documented the xml schema and is also playing a key role in defining the EPCIS extensions for all event types to meet RDC 54 requirements. The Brazil law requires that all events – shipments, receipts, returns, destruction of product, and more – are exchanged between supply chain partners and then submitted back to a central repository. Lastly, TraceLink will also be providing support for the mid-2015 Phase 1 process. EPCIS for Internal Serialized Data Communications For some companies, EPCIS is the preferred standard for internal communication of serialization data at multiple levels throughout their organization, typically using the information standard. TraceLink enables customers to use EPCIS in this capacity. Packaging Line Level Some companies have adopted EPCIS as their data format to exchange commissioning and aggregation data between the packaging line level where the work is done and the serialization numbers are applied, and the solution that captures it all. EPCIS acts as the data formatting protocol between those two systems, addressing what the message looks like. Some packaging lines began building in serialization mechanisms prior to the advent of EPCIS, but those systems will still need to be able to communicate and interact with the EPCIS format. The TraceLink Life Sciences Cloud includes a data translation layer that converts data it receives in any format into a canonical one, neutralizing system disparities. For instance, TraceLink will receive commissioning and aggregation data from the Optel packaging line system using EPCIS but may translate that for data exchange with a trade partner. It may be translated into a non-EPCIS format such as Product Markup Language (PML), or into a trade partner EPCIS format. Even if a trade partner is using EPCIS, it’s highly likely that they will have customized it with their own extensions, so some degree of translation still needs to occur and can be managed by TraceLink’s solution. Enterprise Level At the enterprise level, it’s rare to find an ERP or warehouse system that speaks EPCIS: most of them pre-date the concept of both serialization and EPCIS. Either they do not support EPCIS at all, or companies – who rely heavily on the stability of these core business solutions – are not willing to upgrade to the latest version. Yet these systems will still need to communicate with the mobility and other devices that are used in the warehouse to collect and communicate serialization data. That’s why flexible integration is so important. The TraceLink approach minimizes disruption and the need for change to these systems by being able to work with all data formats and provide an interface between systems. TraceLink provides SOAP, Java, and .net APIs to receive serialization event data – pack and unpack operation, decommissioning of serial numbers, and more - from warehouse mobility devices. This provides flexibility to solution providers, giving them three integration options for communicating data back to TraceLink from their warehouse scanning applications. Overall, supply chain companies are using countless different systems and languages, including EPCIS. TraceLink can convert between all of them – going from EPCIS to PML, or .csv to EPCIS – providing data translation regardless of the specific format. Network Level At the network level, supply chain businesses need to communicate what they are shipping and receiving with their trade partners, who will typically have their own serialization management systems. This is where EPCIS comes into play as a highly valuable tool around the U.S. and Brazil requirement that trade partners exchange data. When a manufacturer sends goods, they will also send information about the associated serialization numbers and aggregation hierarchies. This is new information that needs to be 4 exchanged that hasn’t been part of supply chain communications to date in the US and Brazil, and presents an opportunity for all parties to cleanly implement a standard to communicate this data to potentially large numbers of supply chain trade partners in a common way. One good use case for EPCIS on the network level is between manufacturers and their third party logistics providers (3PLs). When 3PLs have to handle serialized product, manufacturers need to be able to provide the serialized data to them so 3PLs have what they need to execute and then communicate back to the manufacturers. EPCIS works very well in scenarios like this, where one business is operating on behalf of the other and both can benefit from a standardized data exchange. The complexity of supply chain data exchange is particularly magnified in Brazil, where businesses have to exchange compliance data not just with direct trading partners, but also with indirect ones. Having a standardized format is extremely important, especially when compliance is at stake. This is why EPCIS is such an attractive option to meet this need. While the EPCIS information standard would provide the structure and standard nomenclature to allow interoperability in these scenarios, it does not address the complex challenge of transporting the data from one system to the next. How will partners connect to each other and once connected, what mechanism will they use to transfer the EPCIS messages? The TraceLink Life Sciences Cloud provides a network platform that eliminates the need to establish point-to-point connections with dozens to hundreds or even thousands of trade partners. In addition to reducing connection complexity, TraceLink’s network accommodates all of the different ways that businesses will want to transfer messages – SOAP, AS2, and many more. TraceLink’s solution neutralizes the complexity of getting the data from one point to the next. EPCIS Certifications When a solution provider becomes certified for the EPCIS standard, they are getting certified against the global agnostic one. This certification has no relevance in a regulatory compliance context, and is not at all indicative of a provider’s ability to help meet the compliance requirements at hand. If you are using EPCIS for regulatory compliance, then certification around the specific regulatory guideline is what matters. The GS1, industry-specific working groups described above establish certification or conformance test programs that take into consideration all the extensions and use cases necessary to meet compliance requirements. What is the status of certifications for Life Sciences regulations? By the time GS1 released their 1.1 guideline that focused on DSCSA lot level compliance, the industry had already moved ahead with the HDMA guideline for EDI ASNs. Right now, there is no EPCIS certification available that is relevant to helping the Life Sciences industry meet compliance requirements. Past certifications that solution providers have do not enhance their ability to provide solutions. There is still more work to be done on revamping the guideline around serialization before conformance tests are available, but these tests and a DSCSA-relevant certification are anticipated before the end of the year. When they are, TraceLink will participate and will be certified to the EPCIS standard that is relevant to Life Sciences by the end of 2015. Conclusion TraceLink has dedicated senior, strategic personnel to EPCIS standard definition and actual implementation in the supply chain. The company actively and regularly contributes regulatory and technical expertise to GS1 EPCIS-related working groups, participating in four. The first two concern the global standard, and are country and regulation-agnostic: the GSMP EPC Information Service 1.1 and Core Business Vocabulary working group; and the GSMP Event-Based Traceability working group. The other two are focused on applying the EPCIS standard to country-specific regulations: the Rx Secure Supply Chain workgroup in the US; and the Health Subcommittee for GS1 Brazil. While TraceLink’s active involvement benefits these working groups and the larger industry, it also has significant influence on the development of TraceLink solutions. Playing a leadership role in EPCIS guideline development allows TraceLink to architect products that take full advantage of EPCIS strengths; provide guidance to customers around use of the standard; and generally help lead the industry towards the next phase of regulatory compliance. Because the evolution towards global, industry-wide adoption of EPCIS will be a long journey – and one which some companies and systems may never complete – it is critical to have a platform that can work with systems that contribute data in other formats. The TraceLink solution acts as the link between internal systems and trade partners, capturing event data and providing it with both EPCIS and non-EPCIS formats, delivering interoperability. TraceLink works with EPCIS when and where it has been adopted, but can also do full serialization event capture, management, conversion, and exchange with non-EPCIS formats. This comprehensive solution insures that customers do not need to write additional code in order to receive data from trade partners who do not have EPCIS, or to accommodate government reporting format requirements. Ultimately, TraceLink customers can seamlessly exchange and manage data in a multi-format world, achieving interoperability regardless of diverse requirements and system and partner capabilities. The material set forth herein is informational in nature, subject to change without notice, confidential and proprietary information of TraceLink and does not constitute a representation or warranty of TraceLink.