
FAQ: Everything to Know about 3D Printing in Pharma Manufacturing and Packaging
Key Takeaways
- 3D printing enables personalized dosage forms, crucial for pediatric and geriatric patients, by allowing precise construction and customization of medicines.
- New UK legislation recognizes decentralized manufacturing, indicating 3D printing's influence on regulatory frameworks.
3D printing enables personalized precise drug delivery, enhances compounding efficiency, and is driving new regulatory models like distributed pharmaceutical manufacturing.
1. How can 3D printing personalize dosage forms?
Three-dimensional (3D) printing is an advanced additive manufacturing technology that facilitates patient-centric treatment by allowing precise construction of dosage forms, personalized dosing, and versatile release modes. This capability
2. Is 3D printing influencing regulatory frameworks?
The technology is anticipated to play a central role in a distributed manufacturing scheme, often referred to as decentralized manufacturing, which relies on centralized pharmaceutical quality system sites overseeing various 3D printing sites. New legislation in the United Kingdom that came into effect in the summer of 2025 officially recognizes this framework (termed ‘modular manufacture’), signaling the beginning of a new dimension for pharmaceutical manufacturing within regulatory realms.
3. Can 3D printing reduce drug variability?
Research confirms that 3D micro-structure design platforms combined with melt extrusion deposition 3D printing technology can be used to develop drug products with precise, desired release profiles targeted to specific gastrointestinal locations.
4. How does 3D printing improve compounding efficiency?
3D printing technology
5. What are the main adoption challenges?
6. Which technologies are clinically applicable?
Several 3D printing technologies are currently considered more clinically applicable, including SSE, fused deposition modeling, and direct powder extrusion. These methods are favored because they utilize excipients that are FDA-approved, generally recognized as safe, and already available in good manufacturing practice grades.
References
1. Mirasol, F.
2. Zheng, Y; Deng, F; Wang, B; et al.
3. Jørgensen, A.K.; Goyanes, A.; and Basit, A.W.
4. Challener, C.A.
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