“War in West Asia is disrupting the flow of critical medicines to the Gulf, imperilling supply routes for cancer drugs and other treatments that require refrigeration and forcing companies to reroute flights and find overland access into the region,” industry executives said.
Iran-Israel war LIVE: Trump pressures NATO, China over Iran’s closure of key waterway
The conflict, sparked by U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran two weeks ago and broadened by Iranian strikes around the region, has knocked out key air transit hubs and closed shipping routes, snarling the movement of goods for many products from medicines to food and oil.
While there are few signs yet of major shortages, that could change if the conflict drags on, some executives said. The Gulf relies heavily on imports and some medicines have short shelf lives and need strict cold-chain storage, making lengthy overland shipping less practical.
Executives at Western drugmakers said they were seeking alternative routes into the Gulf and trucking some drugs overland from airports such as Jeddah and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia. Other options were Istanbul and Oman.












