In-line monitoring of critical quality attributes (CQAs) during a tableting process is an essential step toward a real-time release strategy. Such CQAs can be the tablet mass, the API content, dissolution, hardness and tensile strength. Since dissolution testing is laborious and time-consuming and cannot be performed in-line, it is desirable to replace dissolution testing with predictive models based on other CQAs that affect the dissolution characteristics, such as the tablet porosity and hardness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper is the second in a series of two that describes the application of discrete element method (DEM) and reduced order modeling to predict the effect of disturbances in the concentration of drug substance at the inlet of a continuous powder mixer on the concentration of the drug substance at the outlet of the mixer. In the companion publication, small-scale material characterization tests, a careful DEM parameter calibration and DEM simulations of the manufacturing process were used to develop a reliable RTD models. In the current work, the same calibration workflow was employed to evaluate the predictive ability of the resulting reduced-order model for an extended design space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, a high-fidelity digital twin was developed to support the design and testing of control strategies for drug product manufacturing via direct compression. The high-fidelity digital twin platform was based on typical pharmaceutical equipment, materials, and direct compression continuous processes. The paper describes in detail the material characterization, the Discrete Element Method (DEM) model and the DEM model parameter calibration approach and provides a comparison of the system's response to the experimental results for stepwise changes in the API concentration at the mixer inlet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContinuous manufacturing of pharmaceuticals offers several benefits, such as increased production efficiency, enhanced product quality control, and lower environmental footprint. To fully exploit these benefits, standard operation mode (production processes with no or minimal disturbance mitigation measures) should be supported by adopting novel quality-by-control (QbC) methodologies. The paper at hand is the first part of a study focused on developing QbC algorithms for optimizing twin-screw wet granulation in the industrial manufacturing line ConsiGma-25, specifically addressing granule composition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTraditional operation modes, such as running the production processes at constant process settings or within a narrow design space, do not fully exploit the advantages of continuous pharmaceutical manufacturing. Integrating Quality by Control (QbC) algorithms as a standard component of production processes can mitigate the effect of diverse process disturbances and enhance process efficiency, particularly in terms of production costs and environmental footprint. This paper explores the potential of QbC algorithms for optimizing twin-screw wet granulation in the ConsiGma-25 manufacturing line, specifically addressing granule size.
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