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A new Dey for aseptic blow/fill/seal

A trio of latest-generation blow/fill/seal machines for aseptic respiratory care products are the first in the U.S. Dey Laboratories receives one-third higher production, better sterility and labor-saving CIP/SIP.

Inside the blow/fill/seal machine, a plastic extrusion is surrounded by the mold (1), conformed to the mold with vacuum, and fil
Inside the blow/fill/seal machine, a plastic extrusion is surrounded by the mold (1), conformed to the mold with vacuum, and fil

Vigorous sales growth of Dey Laboratories' liquid respiratory therapy drugs led this long-time user of blow/fill/seal technology to invest in three of the latest-generation aseptic b/f/s machines made in Germany. The machines, supplied by rommelag USA (Fords, NJ), are used to fill liquid inhalants into 3- and 5-mL single-dose, low-density polyethylene vials. The vials are molded (with integral twist-off caps), sterile-filled and sealed in one process at the Napa, CA, pharmaceutical company, which is affiliated with Merck KGaA of Germany.

Blow/fill/seal machines have been popular among pharmaceutical packagers because they eliminate the purchasing of separate containers and closures. The process also eliminates the labor involved with unloading, sterilizing, and filling and capping.

"We have several suites of rooms, and operators move around, visiting each one," says Ed Fried, director of manufacturing. Dey has used rommelag equipment for over 10 years, and 12 machines are currently in production.

But the automation comes at a price. Historically, b/f/s machines have been slow, since molding is the bottleneck. But with Dey's latest Bottlepack® 360 machines, output tops 180 vials/min, due to an expanded mold configuration of 40 vials per cycle instead of 30 previously-a 33% boost in output. The higher-output machines also cost more, too: $2.5 million apiece, versus about $1.5 million each for the previous models.

Dark/white side sterility

These latest machines are rommelag's first in the U.S. to feature what it calls a dark/white side configuration. The machine is built so that the support and auxiliary equipment maintenance points of the machine are segregated on a non-sterile side of the machine for easier servicing. The machine straddles a dividing wall in Dey's clean room that separates the clean room (Dey declined to identify the sterility level) from the non-sterile areas. "Accessing the machines is much easier," says Fried. "We can maintain many of these systems without getting gowned up and entering the clean room."

Another convenience is a redundant control panel mounted outside the clean room. It permits operators to check the machine and make adjustments, without having to enter the clean room. "For example, if we need to adjust vial wall thickness or fill volume," says Fried, "we can make adjustments through the remote control panel."

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