Scientist wearing PPE clicking a touch screen on a machine used for vaccine production.

Pharmaceutical

Saving More Lives with Digitalized Life Sciences Manufacturing

By Nathan Pettus

The pharmaceutical industry is experiencing a time of great change. The rapid development, approval and deployment of COVID-19 vaccines showed the world that we are only scratching the surface of what modern medicine is capable of. That paradigm shift set the bar for innovation higher than it has ever been. Expectations for life sciences have been drastically altered among the public and throughout the industry.

Now that the industry sees what is possible, teams around the globe are reexamining the treatment development pipeline— exploring smaller batch, highly specialized medicines for patients and responding to increased need for biopharmaceuticals. But without the urgency of a public health crisis, the question many are asking is: How will companies achieve greater speed-to-market and flexible multi-product manufacturing to bring the next generation of treatments quickly and safely to the patients who need them?

At Emerson, we believe greater speed and flexibility can be safely achieved with the right development and deployment of technologies: scheduling software, real-time release testing, one-click technology transfer and autonomous plants. These technologies will accelerate the growth of digital biopharma plants, which will get new products to market faster, enable more flexible and multi-product manufacturing through quick changeover of products, and improve operational integrity through predictive maintenance solutions.

Predictive Tools Drive Efficiency

As manufacturers begin to make different drugs faster, they need to be able to schedule production in a very efficient way. Scheduling software helps companies accurately predict future plant resource availability so they can operate with more flexibility and efficiency. Scheduling software provides a unified view of operations, maintenance, quality and corporate systems, helping validate manufacturing operations and accelerate the process of bringing therapies from clinical trials to full-scale manufacturing.

Shortening Time to Market

Traditional manufacturing practices have served the biopharmaceutical industry well for years — but in complex production scenarios, life sciences manufacturers can find themselves sitting on millions or even billions of dollars in work-in-progress inventory while waiting on quality test results. That waiting game not only extends the time patients must wait for critical treatments, but also dramatically shortens the time manufacturers can capitalize on patent protection to recover research and development costs.

A need for speed to market in life sciences while reducing manufacturing costs is putting a focus on enabling real-time release testing (RTRT). RTRT technology helps manufacturers gain precise control and a deep understanding of the manufacturing process in real time, dramatically reducing the amount of time spent in release testing. When combined with inline monitoring capabilities, teams are empowered to perform quality reviews while treatments are being produced, preventing millions of dollars of finished product from being held in inventory — and helping bring new and existing treatments to patients faster.

Digitalized Collaboration Accelerates Drug Production

A major roadblock for many life sciences companies is technology transfer — the translation of the process, workflows and drug recipes scientists understand to the language of manufacturing and automation used by the equipment and facilities that make the drug. Although complex, accelerating this process is becoming more important with today’s variety of new drugs being made and the flexibility required by life sciences facilities to do more frequent changeovers.

To make this possible, we must digitalize the process developed to make the drug, including its recipes, workflows and scaling instructions. With the right technologies and culture in place, we can enable automation of the technology transfer process and subsequent updates in almost one click.

While one-click technology transfer has not yet been accomplished, at Emerson, we are working toward that goal by leveraging industry collaboration in tandem with technologies like process knowledge management (PKM) software. PKM tools break down the data silos that create tech transfer delays and inhibit speed to market. By standardizing data, interfaces and usability across the entire production pipeline, PKM software makes it easier to evaluate sites against a master recipe, transfer master recipes with process details and push parameters to downstream systems. Emerson has found that under the right circumstances, a more automated technology transfer process can help reduce time to market from 10 years to less than three years.

Fully Automated Execution

Gone are the days when all measurement and maintenance in plants had to be handled manually. New technologies are enabling the development of self-aware, continuously adaptive, “autonomous” plants that can help optimize production and detect and prevent problems before they cause disruptions.

Automation technologies such as simulation and predictive modeling, remote monitoring, artificial intelligence and machine learning are key to tomorrow’s autonomous manufacturing initiatives. And using process analytical technology (PAT), plants are moving toward fast, fully automated execution. When PAT is fully integrated, plants are enabled to perform real-time monitoring and diagnostics, ensure and document quality, optimize facility performance and get ahead of maintenance needs. In addition, digital twin technology is being used not only to model processes in a simulated environment, but also optimize dynamic control through real-time collaboration and virtual process validation.

New technologies like personalized medicine will open the doors to a wide range of new treatments, and today’s automation technologies are the key to putting them into the hands of patients as quickly and safely as possible. The necessary shift toward digitalization is happening fast, building a fully automated future where biopharma companies have greater speed-to-market and increased competitive advantage. As technologies develop and advance in the years to come, the life sciences industry will be able to have an even greater impact on humankind’s health and wellbeing.

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