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Packaging pirates avast

FDA is strongly encouraging drug manufacturers to confront counterfeiters, and to bring new technology to the agency’s attention.

Bayer Biologicals has added shrink bands to its bottles of Gamunex that are random-printed with the Bayer logo.
Bayer Biologicals has added shrink bands to its bottles of Gamunex that are random-printed with the Bayer logo.

It’s the 360-degree parallax image that sets us apart,” said Joe Murawski, sales director for DuPont Authenti-cation Systems. Murawski’s company was one of the vendors hawking anti-counterfeiting packaging and labeling technology at a mini-trade show the Food and Drug Administration sponsored October 15 in Bethesda, MD.

The trade show was held in conjunction with a workshop to get public input on a draft report issued two weeks earlier by the FDA Counterfeit Drug Task Force. A number of drug manufacturer executives attended the day-long session, and the vendors, like Joe Murawski, were trying to catch their eye as they walked the three short aisles of the small room in which the trade show was held.

Most of the vendors seemed to be offering similar types of covert and visible-to-the-consumer technologies. Many displayed some sort of organic, inorganic, or radio frequency “tag” that could be put between the layers of a plastic container or on a label. Others had color-shifting inks for labels, or shrink wraps for bottles, or tabs for boxes on which fancy holograms with hidden codes could be printed. Many of these approaches seemed to be rudimentary. Except maybe for DuPont’s.

DuPont’s parallax-image technology allows a drug manufacturer to print its logo—or anything else—on the induction seal that becomes visible when a consumer or pharmacist screws off the cap from a drug container. The image moves in three dimensions when tilted.

Steve Hess, director of packaging technologies at Merck, Inc., Rahway, NJ, who was at the trade show, called DuPont’s technology “neat.” He added, “I really like it.” But he continued, “I would feel a lot better about it if I could somehow activate it on my packaging line.”

Hess fears that some low-paid worker somewhere in the supply chain could steal enough three-dimensional logos to give Merck big problems.

Many holograms

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