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Quality of FDM 3D Printed Medicines for Pediatrics: Considerations for Formulation Development, Filament Extrusion, Printing Process and Printer Design

  • 3d printing is capable of providing dose individualization for pediatric medicines and translating the precision medicine approach into practical application. In pediatrics, dose individualization and preparation of small dosage forms is a requirement for successful therapy, which is frequently not possible due to the lack of suitable dosage forms. For precision medicine, individual characteristics of patients are considered for the selection of the best possible API in the most suitable dose with the most effective release profile to improve therapeutic outcome. 3d printing is inherently suitable for manufacturing of individualized medicines with varying dosages, sizes, release profiles and drug combinations in small batch sizes, which cannot be manufactured with traditional technologies. However, understanding of critical quality attributes and process parameters still needs to be significantly improved for this new technology. To ensure health and safety of patients, cleaning and process validation needs to be established. Additionally, adequate analytical methods for the in-process control of intermediates, regarding their printability as well as control of the final 3d printed tablets considering any risk of this new technology will be required. The PolyPrint consortium is actively working on developing novel polymers for fused deposition modeling (FDM) 3d printing, filament formulation and manufacturing development as well as optimization of the printing process, and the design of a GMP-capable FDM 3d printer. In this manuscript, the consortium shares its views on quality aspects and measures for 3d printing from drug-loaded filaments, including formulation development, the printing process, and the printed dosage forms. Additionally, engineering approaches for quality assurance during the printing process and for the final dosage form will be presented together with considerations for a GMP-capable printer design.

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Author:Julian Quodbach, Malte Bogdahn, Jörg Breitkreutz, Rebecca Chamberlain, Karin Eggenreich, Alessandro Giuseppe Elia, Nadine Gottschalk, Gesine Gunkel-Grabole, Lena Hoffmann, Dnyaneshwar Kapote, Thomas Kipping, Stefan Klinken, Fabian Loose, Tristan Marquetant, Hellen Windolf, Simon Geißler, Tilmann Spitz
URN:urn:nbn:de:hbz:832-epub4-21349
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s43441-021-00354-0
ISSN:2168-4790
ISSN:2168-4804
Parent Title (English):Therapeutic Innovation & Regulatory Science
Publisher:Springer International Publishing
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Date of first Publication:2022/11/01
Date of Publication (online):2023/04/25
GND-Keyword:Pharmazie
Tag:Drug Safety and Pharmacovigilance; Pharmacotherapy; Pharmacy
Volume:56
Issue:6
Page Number:19
Institutes:Anlagen, Energie- und Maschinensysteme (F09) / Fakultät 09 / Institut für Produktentwicklung und Konstruktionstechnik
Dewey Decimal Classification:600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften
Open Access:Open Access
DeepGreen:DeepGreen
Licence (German):License LogoCreative Commons - CC BY - Namensnennung 4.0 International