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Inkjet printing for pharmaceutics - A review of research and manufacturing.


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Authors

Harrington, Tomás S 
Martin, Graham D 
Hutchings, Ian M 

Abstract

Global regulatory, manufacturing and consumer trends are driving a need for change in current pharmaceutical sector business models, with a specific focus on the inherently expensive research costs, high-risk capital-intensive scale-up and the traditional centralised batch manufacturing paradigm. New technologies, such as inkjet printing, are being explored to radically transform pharmaceutical production processing and the end-to-end supply chain. This review provides a brief summary of inkjet printing technologies and their current applications in manufacturing before examining the business context driving the exploration of inkjet printing in the pharmaceutical sector. We then examine the trends reported in the literature for pharmaceutical printing, followed by the scientific considerations and challenges facing the adoption of this technology. We demonstrate that research activities are highly diverse, targeting a broad range of pharmaceutical types and printing systems. To mitigate this complexity we show that by categorising findings in terms of targeted business models and Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API) chemistry we have a more coherent approach to comparing research findings and can drive efficient translation of a chosen drug to inkjet manufacturing.

Description

Keywords

Continuous inkjet, Continuous manufacturing, Drop-on-demand, Inkjet, Pharmaceutical printing, Biomedical Research, Computer Systems, Drug Delivery Systems, Drug Discovery, Drug Industry, Humans, Technology, Pharmaceutical

Journal Title

Int J Pharm

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0378-5173
1873-3476

Volume Title

494

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/H018913/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/I033459/1)
This project was supported by (i) the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and industrial partners in the Programme Grant number EP/H018913/1 ‘Innovation in Industrial Inkjet Technology’, (ii) EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing in Continuous Manufacturing and Crystallisation (EP/1033459/1) and (iii) Department of Business, Innovation and Skill’s (BIS) Advanced Manufacturing Supply Chain Initiative (AMSCI) funded Project ‘Remedies’ (TS/L006529/1).