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Blockchain-Enabled Traceability in Pharmaceutical Supply Chains: A Mapping Review of Evidence for Visibility, Anti-Counterfeiting, and Chain-of-Custody Control

  • Félix Díaz
  • , Nhell Cerna
  • , Rafael Liza
  • , Bryan Motta
  • , Segundo Rojas-Flores

    Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background: Blockchain is increasingly proposed to strengthen pharmaceutical traceability, anti-counterfeiting, and chain of custody in multi-actor supply chains, but the evidence base remains heterogeneous in technical rigor and operational clarity. Methods: We conducted a mapping review of Scopus and Web of Science to map publication patterns, identify dominant thematic configurations, and compare citation-salient studies across recurring solution profiles and operational design dimensions. The final corpus comprised 103 records. Results: The literature expanded rapidly from 2019 to 2025, with notable geographic concentration and dissemination mainly through technically focused outlets. Keyword analysis identified a core traceability theme, an implementation stream centered on smart contracts, Ethereum, and security, and additional streams involving vaccines and regulatory or credentialing concerns. Citation-salient studies clustered into implemented systems and prototypes, architecture or framework proposals, and contextual maturity or decision-layer evidence. Across these profiles, transferability depended less on platform choice than on governance and access-control assumptions, modular smart contract roles, and verifiable on-chain/off-chain data placement. Conclusions: Chain-of-custody semantics and evaluation methods remain inconsistently formalized, limiting cross-study comparability and the interpretability of operational claims. Benchmark-oriented assessments and minimal reporting standards specifying governance parameters, logistics scope and checkpoints, workload, measurement conditions, and concrete evidence artifacts are needed.

    Original languageAmerican English
    Article number85
    JournalLogistics
    Volume10
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    StateIndexed - Apr 2026

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2026 by the authors.

    UN SDGs

    This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

    1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
      SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

    Keywords

    • blockchain
    • chain of custody
    • counterfeit drug prevention
    • pharmaceutical supply chain
    • smart contracts
    • traceability
    • track and trace

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