Contract packagers expand operations and services to accommodate growing need.
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Demand for contract packaging is strong. Driving forces for outsourcing include the growing number of virtual pharmaceutical companies, plant consolidation, global emerging markets, the need to maximize internal resources, and the rise in biopharmaceutical products, which prompts more companies to turn to contract packagers to label and kit products. Another influence on growth is the expanding number of rare and orphan drug indications. These often high-valueproducts can be difficult to manufacture and frequently require customized packaging and temperature-controlled handling.
“From a high-level perspective, outsourcing to contract packagers allows pharma companies to do what they do best: develop and market drugs,” says Joe Luke, vice-president of sales and marketing for Reed-Lane, which offers blister packaging, bottling, pouching, and vial filling as well as secondary labeling, cartoning, card sealing, and kitting of vials and syringes. He explains, “A contract packager is usually more nimble and quicker to react than most pharma companies when it comes to packaging launches or changes.”
With ever-evolving and increasing regulatory requirements, “outsourcing to a specialist contract packaging organization is often seen as the safest and most reliable, as well as cost- and time-efficient, way to proceed,” adds Phil DiGiacomo, senior vice-president of sales and marketing at PCI Pharma Services, a global provider of packaging services for commercial medicines as well as drug development, scalable drug manufacture, clinical trial packaging, and labeling, storage, and distribution.
“Brand owners are increasingly looking for full-service suppliers that are able to support them throughout the entire product lifecycle-from formulation development to compounding and filling through to packaging and delivery,” reports Shaun Gaus, president and CEO of Precise Packaging, a specialist in over-the-counter liquids and aerosols. He predicts this contract packaging market trend will continue into the foreseeable future “as it provides a variety of benefits including operational advantages and cost savings.”
Brand owner focus on core competencies prompts demand for collaborative partnerships and a range of turnkey services potentially starting with product development and continuing through testing, clinical production/samples, pilot production, sourcing of material/components, and full-scaleproduction. “Sonic Packaging has continued to add expertise to its production management team and develop stronger ties with materials suppliers to co-develop new technologies that will add value and give brand owners a competitive edge,” says Howard Thau, president of Sonic Packaging, a cGMP-compliant supplier of turnkey packaging solutions in product development, package design, sourcing, manufacturing, and sampling, specializing in single-use, metered-dose, and applicator devices.
Outsourcing givesbrand owners access to the expertise and know-how of seasoned product manufacturing and packaging experts. Gaus says, “Contract manufacturing also reduces the costs of products by providing brand owners with access to flexible skilled labor, bulk purchasing costs, etc.while reducing errors. The result is a lower-priced finished product, which can ultimately increase sales and improve margins.”
Luke agrees, noting, “Based on the size of the package, volumes ordered, and packaging configuration, contract packagers can find cost and production efficiencies that in-house packaging may not have been able to find.”
Outsourcing not only can lower costs, increase sales, and improve margins, but also streamline the entire production process, by providing “one main contact point for manufacturing, sourcing of all components, scheduling, testing, and shipping of finishing goods,” concludes Thau.
With demand increasing for a broader range of services, contract packagers are expanding capabilities and infrastructure. For example, Pharma Tech Industries has boosted capacity and speed with the startupof a Medisealline capable of producing more than 300 sachets/min. “The Medisealline supports both client growth within the market category as well as recentand projected business [demand],” reports Tu T. Tran, vice-president of sales and marketing for Pharma Tech Industries. “Such assets are an extension of our customers, facilitating turnkey, high-speed efficiency, which fulfills cost-of-goods-sold metrics without the need to incur millions of dollars in capital expense.”
Aphena Pharma Solutions has expanded US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) operations and storage and added powder filling and inhaler capacity. “We’ve invested millions of dollars in order to provide our customer base with one of the broadest ranges of packaging formats in the industry,” said Eric Allen, vice-president of sales and marketing at Aphena, in a press release. Since 2016, the company has expanded both the CII vault capacity and the DEA-licensed CIII-CV cage at itsliquid and semisolids division in Easton, Maryland, to hold more than 85 pallets of active products. The Easton liquid and semisolid plant now includesmore than 12 custom packaging lines with additional blending equipment and capacity already on the drawing board for 2019 (1).
Aphena’s solid-dose division in Cookeville, Tennessee, has almost doubled in size to more than 135,000 ft2, adding packaging lines and increasing CII capacity to more than 110 pallets for blisters, bottles, carding, or kit packaging. Finally,Aphena has invested millions of dollars in serialization capabilities and to prepare for serialization data exchange (1).
“Investments at PCI Pharma Services have included the acquisition of new sites to support clients both globally and at a more local level, expansions of existing sites in terms of size and scale of overall physical footprint, and general line capacity extensions, as well as innovative technologies plus highly specialized cold chain, ultra-coldchain, and controlled substance capabilities,” reports DiGiacomo. In addition, he says, “We have also undertaken selective strategic alliances including an exclusive collaboration agreement with CSP Technologiesfor US clinical trials and stability testing utilizing Activ-Blisterpackaging solutions, which help protect and promote speed-to-market for pharmaceutical and medical device products with heightened susceptibility to moisture and gases, especially oxygen.”
Contract packagers are well-prepared for serialization requirements. With at least 80 serialization lines across its global network of facilities, PCI Pharma Services delivers serialized medicines with integrated overt and covert anticounterfeitingprotection featuresand can meet current and upcoming requirements internationally. “It’s been a long journey,” noted Brad Payne, PCI’s senior vice-president of Global Operations. “The industry still has a ways to go in coalescing around a truly common standard, but PCI has been able to leverage an adaptable solution that allows us to meet the requirements of established markets as well as those countries which are still in flux with shifting or developing standards” (2).
Serialization is just one of the upgrades at Reed-Lane, which recently equipped several bottling lines for full aggregation. “We knew that in order to continue servicing existing customers and to grow our business, we would need to make the necessary investment in serialization,” says Luke. “From our conversations with our customers and serialization partners, we decided to install aggregation capabilities right away, instead of waiting until 2023, when it will be required.”
Reed-Lane also has installed a new secondary vial and syringe labeling and kitting suite and a fully validated cold-chain storage unit. “With the growth of the biologicmarket, we’ve seen a continued rise in the demand for cold-chain storage,” reports Luke.
Many contract packaging organizations specialize in certainproduct or packaging formats. At Precise Packaging, a specialist in over-the-counter liquids and aerosols, a new aerosol production line has boosted capacity. The company also recently opened an 18,000-ft2 contract manufacturing facility with a high-speed liquid filling line and automated shrink bundler. Plans for 2019 include improvements to bulk storage and compounding areas to improve batching capabilities and capacities.
Halo Pharma specializes in topical products. With topical centers of excellence at its Whippany, New Jersey, and Mirabel, Quebec, Canada, facilities, Halo Pharma helps pharmaceutical companies develop and manufacture compliant, high-quality gels, creams, lotions, and sterile and non-sterile ointments. “Halo covers the full breadth of equipment, technologies, skills, and expertise when it comes to taking a topical drug product from formulation to market,” said Lee Karras, CEO of Halo Pharma, in a press release. “Our manufacturing and packaging facilities are co-located for a seamlesstransition to commercial supply; we handle the bioequivalence (IVRT [in-vitro release testing]), chemistry, and microbiology testing that are essential for today’s dermatological markets” (3). The company offers packaging that includes tubes, jars, and bottles in various sizes, including trial or sample sizes.
Thermo Fisher Scientific is investing $150 million in its Pharma Services business to increase capacity for sterile liquid and lyophilized product development and commercial manufacturing. New aseptic filling lines and isolator technology will be installed in Monza and Ferentino, Italy, and Greenville, North Carolina. Projects are expected to be completed before mid-2021 (4).
1. Aphena Pharma Solutions, “Aphena Continues on a Path of Growth,” Press Release, Sept. 25, 2018.
2. PCI Pharma Services, “PCI Pharma Services Celebrates Significant Milestone–80 Serialization Installations across Global Supply Network,” Press Release, Oct. 29, 2018.
3. Halo Pharma, “Halo Pharma Simplifies Topical Drug Product Development and Manufacturing,” Press Release, April 12, 2018.
4. Thermo Fisher Scientific, “Thermo Fisher Scientific to Invest $150 Million to Expand Pharma Services Capabilities,” Press Release, March 18, 2019.
Pharmaceutical Technology
Vol. 43, No. 5
May 2019
Pages: 54–56
When referring to this article, please cite it as H. Forcinio, "Contract Packaging Grows," Pharmaceutical Technology 43 (5) 2019.
Hallie Forcinio is packaging editor at Pharmaceutical Technology.
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