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Procurement in clinical research is increasingly orchestrated through complex vendor ecosystems contract research organizations (CROs), central laboratories, eClinical technology providers, and specialty logistics partners whose performance directly shapes cost, cycle time, quality, and inspection readiness. Digital procurement (e‑procurement/source‑to‑pay S2P platforms, contract‑lifecycle management CLM, supplier relationship and vendor performance management SRM/VPM, robotic process automation RPA, artificial intelligence and machine learning AI/ML, and blockchain) promises to transform vendor management while harmonising processes across sites and geographies. We conducted a PRISMA‑guided review (2018–2025) of peer‑reviewed literature spanning supply‑chain management, information systems, operations, and healthcare journals. Twenty‑one studies met inclusion criteria. Convergent evidence shows that integrated e‑procurement/S2P and CLM/SRM/VPM suites can reduce cycle times, enhance transparency and compliance, and provide the data substrate for KPI‑driven oversight; however, value is contingent on data stewardship, integration quality, and operating‑model change. AI/ML increasingly supports supplier‑risk sensing and predictive governance; deep‑learning approaches in particular have demonstrated superior predictive accuracy in critical industries, extending the broader roles of AI identified in procurement. When RPA follows business‑process‑management (BPM)‑led redesign, quasi‑experimental evidence documents meaningful reductions in manual workload and procurement cycle time, while complementary work frames RPA as a strategic capability that must be governed and maintained to scale. Blockchain shows promise for traceability and anti‑counterfeit in healthcare and pharmaceutical supply chains, yet empirical, at‑scale deployments in clinical‑trial settings remain limited, with performance and governance challenges to overcome. A dynamic‑capabilities lens clarifies why tools alone do not harmonise processes: sensing, seizing, and reconfiguring capabilities are prerequisites for sustained impact. We conclude with a practical blueprint for clinical procurement leaders and a research agenda calling for controlled, life‑sciences‑specific outcome studies linking digital procurement to milestones such as time‑to‑site activation, first‑patient‑in, and audit findings.
Ray, Gourab (Sun,) studied this question.
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