Is pharma overlooking aggregation?

Contract manufacturing organization PCI Pharma Services assesses serialization and aggregation, partnering with key vendors to address issues ranging from OEE to ink leachability.

Bottle serialization code inspection line of site is in the horizontal direction here, suggesting a need for a helper code on the top or bottom of the bottles.
Bottle serialization code inspection line of site is in the horizontal direction here, suggesting a need for a helper code on the top or bottom of the bottles.

Even with FDA’s one-year delay regarding DSCSA product identifier enforcement, serialization demands continue to challenge pharmaceutical manufacturers. Imagine meeting those deadlines on more than 80 global packaging lines.

That’s the task PCI Pharma Services is facing head-on. Because DSCSA regulations call for serialization on the “unit of sale,” PCI, a contract manufacturing organization (CMO) serving the pharmaceutical industry, must be “serialization-ready” for multiple package types, such as blisters, bottles, adherence packaging, vials, prefilled syringes, autoinjectors and pens, folding cartons, a kit packed with multiple components, a 10-pack of vials, or even a shipping case of a product, depending on what defines a manufacturer/customer’s unit of sale.

“As a contract packager, managing this variability and ensuring flexibility in our operations is absolutely vital to our success,” notes Justin Schroeder, PCI’s Senior Executive Director, Global Marketing & Design. “We have worked closely with our select vendors to custom-engineer the equipment we are using, providing the most flexible and adaptable solutions and at the same time leveraging consistency for our staff and operators. We need to support serialization requirements for the U.S. and Europe with its tamper-evident requirements, in addition to emerging market destinations like China, South Korea, Turkey, etc.”

The CMO has serialized commercial pharmaceutical packaging for more than five years, initially developing packaging lines by relying on in-house expertise. But once the U.S. government established firm regulatory serialization deadlines, the company knew it needed to add considerable scale to meet growing customer demands. “At that point, we executed a broad market analysis of serialization systems and the maturity of their solutions,” Schroeder says.

The company’s analysis led to partnerships with key vendors that include Domino, Antares Vision, Xyntek and Marchesini, to address serialization and aggregation challenges.

Schroeder explains, “Serialization has really taken over our company at this point of the readiness process. We have so many clients mobilizing at the same time, it dominates our everyday activities. We are scaling up installation and readiness to the point where we have three-to-five installations a week. Leveraging the consistency and best practices of our select vendor partners like Domino has allowed us to really focus our efforts to meet all our clients’ goals and deadlines. Domino has been fantastic in engaging both Antares and Marchesini as true partners, particularly given the critical nature of code application and online vision inspection inherent to the serialization process. We have benefitted from their expertise and finding the optimal solution for each application.”

Aggregation phase

Following serialization, aggregation is typically considered the next phase in the pharmaceutical supply chain. Yet, as Schroeder points out, “We continue to see some companies shying away from aggregation, largely due to the DSCSA not requiring it. That runs completely contrary to our recommendation to aggregate based on our real-world evidence that it significantly improves processes and quality.A significant point of consideration is the robustness of online coding and inspection, since we have to account for every individual unit.”

He says aggregation continues to be a hot topic in the industry, but notes, “The drug distribution community has made it apparent they desire to be supplied goods with aggregation and will not accept the practice of ‘inference.’ Many large multinational pharmaceutical companies have publicly stated they intend to meet the minimum standard of the DSCSA legislation and therefore will not begin with aggregated drug product. We feel this is a missed opportunity.

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