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Safe Connections to Prevent Counterfeit Drugs

The Industrial Internet of Things Comes of Age for Pharmaceutical Manufacturers.

Omega Design Corporation’s PakSync modules make unit to bundle aggregation easy and secure
Omega Design Corporation’s PakSync modules make unit to bundle aggregation easy and secure

A growing number of pharmaceutical manufacturers and their partners and vendors are adopting technologies to leverage the full potential of The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT). The connectivity power of IIoT has helped the industry comply with regulations intended to keep drugs safe and to prevent counterfeit products from entering the supply chain. As more devices, equipment, and production lines become connected, keeping those connections secure from unauthorized access continues to be a top priority.

Because of e-pedigree and serialization requirements, the pharmaceutical industry has been at the forefront of IIoT breakthroughs in data sharing and connectivity in the last few years. New trends and technologies in the world of the IIoT for pharmaceutical manufacturing (sometimes referred to as IIoT-PM) will be on display at the co-located Pharma EXPO (McCormick Place, Chicago; Nov. 6 - 9) and PACK EXPO International 2016.

Pharma EXPO is co-produced by PMMI, The Association for Processing and Packaging Technologies and the International Society for Pharmaceutical Engineering (ISPE). Pharmaceutical professionals will be able to see modern processing and packaging equipment covering anti-counterfeiting, quality control and assurance, tamper-proof packaging, validation, and numerous other technologies.

Collaboration is key

According to Robert Muehlfellner, Corporate VP, Product Strategy and Innovation at B&R Automation (Booth #N-6141), the IIoT represents a convergence of Internet technology (IT) and operations technologies (OT), with an emphasis on data processing and security. In a manufacturing world that requires close collaboration with IT, to be successful in a security-conscious industry will require strong partnerships, he believes.

“Smaller equipment builders are being forced into the world of connectivity but sometimes lack in-house expertise to take advantage of it,” Muehlfellner says. “Regulations are also getting more complex, and they are not harmonized globally. Our challenge is to help customers adopt these technologies and become more compliant with regulations.”

B&R offers automated systems used in discreet manufacturing from controllers, I/O systems, motors and drives, to Human Machine Interfaces (HMI) and software. While B&R supports companies of all sizes, Muehlfellner notes it has found a particular niche with smaller manufacturers struggling with IIoT technologies.

Controlling access to data is one of the biggest concerns in the industry, which may seem a bit paradoxical in an age of close collaboration and information-sharing. “In the last decade the industry was all about getting machines connected to each other, and now we’ve shifted from ‘openness’ to security to prevent unauthorized data access and manipulation,” Muehlfellner says.

Managing data security and quantity

The need for data security has put a focus on the type of communication protocols used in the industry. Daymon Thompson, Automation Specialist for Beckhoff Automation (Booth #N-6125), notes that Open Platform Communications-United Architecture (OPC-UA) protocols have emerged as a standard for smart connectivity and data exchange in the pharmaceutical industry. Established by the OPC Foundation, OPC-UA is a vendor-neutral industrial M2M communication protocol that includes built-in data encryption.

“With OPC-UA you don’t need to be security experts to ensure safe data exchange, and it also provides interoperability among devices from different vendors,” Thompson says. He adds that other open and standardized communication protocols such as MQ Telemetry Transport (MQTT) and Advanced Message Queuing Protocol (AMQP) are also gaining importance because they offer fast and efficient data transmission.

While managing data security is important, another critical industry need is the ability to handle the vast quantities of data that IIoT technologies are able to capture. “Simply gathering massive amounts of data and having the ability to move it around anywhere in the world is not the end goal,” Thompson says. “Analytics technology is required to generate insights out of the data to help make informed, intelligent business and production decisions.”

To this end, Beckhoff has introduced a new software solution called TwinCAT Analytics that records and analyzes production data in IIoT and “smart” factory settings. When paired with cloud services or enterprise servers, it can help store large quantities of data while a software workbench performs cycle analysis, energy demand and RMS calculations directly on the controller. Beckhoff’s software options connect directly with Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud-hosting platforms.

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