Quantum Pharmaceutical


Quantum Pharmaceutical is a manufacturer and supplier of unlicensed medicines and Special Obtain products based in Burnopfield, County Durham.

History

Quantum Pharmaceutical was formed in 2004 and began trading with a small team of pharmacists and technicians at Tyne Metropolitan College on North Tyneside. It focused on selling special supplies to retail and wholesale pharmacy.
In 2006 the company expanded and moved to Burnopfield in County Durham.
In 2011, Quantum Pharmaceutical acquired Total Medication Management Services Ltd, a distributor of medication in Biodose to various sectors.
In 2012 the firm acquired UL Medicines, a supplier of unlicensed pharmaceutical imports and batch made specials to hospitals. In that year the company also bought a stake in Protomed Ltd, the developer of Biodose, which is a monitored dosage system for patients in care homes and in care at home.
In 2014 the Quantum Pharmaceutical successfully joined the London Stock Market. It raised £106.1 million by placing 106.1 million vendor and new ordinary shares with investors at a placing price of 100 pence per ordinary share. Quantum Pharmaceutical's market capitalisation on admission, based on the placing price, is approximately £125 million. The net proceeds of the Placing will be used by the Group to repay a proportion of the debt within the business; enable it to acquire the remaining shares in Colonis Pharma Limited, the specialist pharmaceutical product development business, that it does not already own; and help accelerate the execution of the Group's strategy. Admission will provide Quantum Pharmaceutical with increased reputation and profile, the ability to incentivise key employees and provide access to the capital markets for further equity funding in the future, should it be required.

Products and services

In June 2013 the Daily Telegraph infiltrated reporters into the annual Pharmacy Congress to investigate malpractice in the market for Specials. These products are generally individually priced. It was alleged that the company was prepared to offer backhanders in various ways. In particular it was alleged that the company could supply generic drugs free of charge in return for the right to supply a chain of pharmacies with special drugs.
In December 2013 it was fined more than £380,000 by the Office of Fair Trading over a cartel arrangement in which it carved up some of a multimillion-pound market in prescription drugs for care homes with Lloyds Pharmacy.