New Systems for Counterfeit Protection and Quality Control
Packaging Forum
New Systems for Counterfeit
Protection and Quality Control
Hallie Forcinio is Pharmaceutical
Technology's Packaging Forum Editor, 4708 Morningside Drive, Cleveland,
OH 44109, tel. 216.351.5824, fax 216.351.5684, editorhal@cs.com
Product
security and quality control were major themes of this year's
Interphex trade show, held April 26–28 in New York City. A variety
of interesting packaging machinery innovations were featured at the
event.
Brand
protection
Counterfeiting and diversion have become top concerns for
pharmaceutical manufacturers as counterfeiting technology becomes more
sophisticated, the incidence of fake products increases, and organized
crime and terrorists turn to counterfeit goods to generate cash flow.
Most experts recommend layering protective technologies by selecting a
combination of overt and covert techniques. To provide track-and-trace
capability, especially for Class II drugs, some drug manufacturers have
begun to include radio frequency identification (RFID) tags at the item
level.
Overt technologies are readily visible and include features such as
holograms or color-shifting ink. Covert technologies are not visible to
the naked eye and include the use of security markers, or taggants,
which can be mixed with inks, coatings, or the packaging material.
One taggant solution consists of using particles half the diameter of a
human hair to create a code that is revealed by a special microimaging
reader and software. These taggants can be made from food-grade
materials such as cellulose or gelatin and can be incorporated into the
packaging in various ways such as:
an adhesive;
a coating on a label or other packaging substrate;
a stripe on the side of the cap;
in combination with a desiccant.
The taggant can be customized to create a unique signature
for the product. Authentication can occur on three levels, including
simple presence detection with an off-the-shelf scope, pattern matching
of the cell-like taggant with a camera-based system, and the removal of
the taggant to confirm its identity (Invisible Security Marker, Adhesives Research, Inc., Glen Rock,
PA, www.adhesivesresearch.com; Invisible Security Marker Micro-Imaging Reader, Complete Inspection Systems, Inc.,
Indiatlantic, FL, www.completeinspectionsystems.com).
Another taggant supplier can create an almost infinite variety of
unique codes by mixing odorless, colorless taggant powder in ink or
other media in quantities of less than two parts per million. This low
concentration means that it is nearly impossible to find, much less
reverse-engineer, the taggant. The randomly dispersed taggants create a
unique fingerprint that is readable by a proprietary electromagnetic
reader. The fingerprint is identified by reading a specific area on the
package or label such as a logo. By using an electronic grid, the
reader measures and assigns positions to 12–15 particles in the field
of view using an edge detection algorithm. Then this information is
stored in 16–20-bit encrypted code, thereby requiring minimal data
storage. Plug-and-play software is provided, allowing brand owners to
establish and maintain their own databases. The software can be
stand-alone or a bolt-on module for an enterprise resource planning
system. Readers can be simple pass–fail devices or decoders and can be
disguised as an everyday object such as a cell phone or pen. The
process of compounding the taggants with the drug ingredients, or
applying a taggant-equipped coating to solid dosage forms, is being
studied in conjunction with the US Food and Drug Administration. Such
methods would provide product authentication at the pill level (Creo
Traceless Security and Authentication System, Creo, Inc., Burnaby, BC, Canada, www.creo.com/traceless).
Other covert technologies include inks that are visible only when
exposed to infrared or ultraviolet light and sophisticated printing
techniques. One printing method conceals a message in tiny type
(Microprinting, The Challenge Printing Co., Clifton, NJ, www.challengeprintingco.com).
Another special printing technique creates a pattern that is only
revealed when a screened key is placed over the printed area. Messages
can be printed in two directions so that two different messages can be
hidden (Digital Watermark, The Challenge Printing Co.).
Labeling software makes it possible to manage label data and templates
while allowing the user to print and encode RFID labels destined for
packaging and pallets. Compatible with label printer–applicators, an
XML interface allows the program to be linked to any enterprise
resource planning system that can handle XML files. Because the program
is RFID capable, it can maintain product pedigree and chain-of-custody
data that are generated as product moves through the supply chain. A
validation protocol cuts script development time by approximately two
months (ROBAR Enterprise Label Management System, Innovatum Inc., Sugar Hills, GA, www.innovatum.com). (continued)