Author
Listed:
- Félix Díaz
(Escuela Profesional de Ingeniería de Sistemas, Facultad de Ingeniería y Arquitectura, Universidad Autónoma del Perú, Lima 150142, Peru)
- Nhell Cerna
(Facultad de Ingeniería, Universidad Tecnológica del Perú, Lima 150101, Peru)
- Rafael Liza
(Escuela de Posgrado, Universidad Continental, Lima 15113, Peru)
- Bryan Motta
(Departamento Académico de Cursos Básicos, Universidad Científica del Sur, Lima 15067, Peru)
- Segundo Rojas-Flores
(Escuela Profesional de Ingeniería Industrial, Facultad de Ingeniería y Arquitectura, Universidad Autónoma del Perú, Lima 150142, Peru)
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.
Suggested Citation
Félix Díaz & Nhell Cerna & Rafael Liza & Bryan Motta & Segundo Rojas-Flores, 2026.
"Blockchain-Enabled Traceability in Pharmaceutical Supply Chains: A Mapping Review of Evidence for Visibility, Anti-Counterfeiting, and Chain-of-Custody Control,"
Logistics, MDPI, vol. 10(4), pages 1-35, April.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jlogis:v:10:y:2026:i:4:p:85-:d:1917423
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