Articles in this Issue

  • Scares - Some Real, Some Fake

    Scares - Some Real, Some Fake

    The statement from our government’s health leaders that Tylenol causes autism is not backed by science. In fact, every major medical organization has stated that acetaminophen remains the safest pain and fever option in pregnancy when used as directed.
  • An Interview with Dr Peter Surman

    An Interview with Dr Peter Surman

    Tablets can appear to be the most economical dosage form for investigational medicines, and it is natural to want to contain costs as much as possible in the early stages of development. However, softgels offer significant long-term advantages that can lead to a better return on investment for drug sponsors. The primary long-term benefits include improved bioavailability, enhanced patient compliance, and superior product stability.
  • Microbial Risk Management in Aseptic Processing - Did Bill Whyte Get it Right?

    Microbial Risk Management in Aseptic Processing - Did Bill Whyte Get it Right?

    This commentary highlights how the advances in technology, risk assessment, and regulatory guidelines have excluded human intervention in aseptic filling, improving both product quality and patient safety. The risk of microbiological contamination during aseptic processing during the past four decades is largely a reflection of technological advances, the application of microbiological risk management tools, and the emphasis on contamination control by regulators.
  • Pharmaceutical P.I.N. Points : Patent Innovation News

    Pharmaceutical P.I.N. Points : Patent Innovation News

    The purpose of this column is to highlight and summarize recent key patents in the The pharmaceutical arena issued by the US Patent Office in June and July, 2025.
  • An Interview with Ali Mroue and Jay Patel

    An Interview with Ali Mroue and Jay Patel

    “Traditional” methods are viewed as the gold standard, highly recognized, widely regulated, and backed by decades of acceptance, which leaves little external pressure to move away from them. On the other hand, adopting rapid methods requires significant investment in new technologies, extensive validation to meet regulatory expectations, and overcoming cultural hesitation to abandon a well-established approach.
  • Empowering Patients at Home: How Micro Vial Innovations in Drug Packaging Enhance Treatment Adherence

    Empowering Patients at Home: How Micro Vial Innovations in Drug Packaging Enhance Treatment...

    The healthcare sector is undergoing a profound transformation as at-home injectable treatments become increasingly prevalent.
  • Safety First: How Preclinical Toxicology Shapes ASO Therapies for Rare Diseases

    Safety First: How Preclinical Toxicology Shapes ASO Therapies for Rare Diseases

    Rare diseases (i.e., “orphan diseases”) represent a global health challenge that affects around 500 million people worldwide. Most rare disease sufferers face lifelong hurdles in diagnosis and obtaining effective medications. Despite the rapid pace of medical innovation, fewer than 6% of rare diseases have approved therapies, leaving many patients with few solutions and even less hope.
  • Overcoming Data Barriers:  How Cloud and SaaS are Transforming Life Sciences Manufacturing

    Overcoming Data Barriers: How Cloud and SaaS are Transforming Life Sciences Manufacturing

    Harnessing the full potential of data in pharmaceutical manufacturing can be complex for life sciences companies. Challenges include connecting systems, comparing data from sites with different systems, managing the volume, variety, and quality of information, overcoming data silos, and legacy technology. These all exacerbate interoperability, contextualization, and statistics issues, which impede innovation.
  • An Interview with Meera Raghuram

    An Interview with Meera Raghuram

    Many commonly used excipients were developed decades ago and may not be optimal for formulating today’s increasingly complex molecules into effective therapeutics. This is especially true for the growing number of poorly soluble and poorly bioavailable BCS Class II and IV active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) in the development pipeline.
  • Redesigning RNA Delivery and Production:  Unlocking the Full Potential of Personalized Cancer Therapeutics

    Redesigning RNA Delivery and Production: Unlocking the Full Potential of Personalized Cancer...

    The therapeutic promise of RNA-based medicines has never been more visible. From pandemic-era vaccines to next-generation cancer treatments, RNA is fast becoming a leading modality for precision medicine. Among its most exciting applications are personalized cancer therapeutics - custom-designed mRNA therapies tailored to a specific patient’s tumor profile. But as the PCT field matures, new bottlenecks are emerging in the areas of delivery and manufacturing, hindering widespread usage.
  • An Interview with Timothy Cser and Lamin Jallow

    An Interview with Timothy Cser and Lamin Jallow

    We will see more robust automation technologies on the market to address the evolving expectations for QC microbiology. As regulations become more prescriptive, leaving less room for interpretation, and as manufacturing throughput becomes more crucial for newly marketed drugs, the expectation will be that automation can support these drivers rather than sometimes being the bottleneck to getting product to market.
  • An Interview with Tommy O’Donnell

    An Interview with Tommy O’Donnell

    Pharma companies want fewer surprises and faster answers. We see more continuous monitoring instead of spot checks, systems built for data integrity from the start, and cloud tools that make compliance easier to scale across sites. The big shift: clients want monitoring to feel less like paperwork and more like a live dashboard they can trust.
  • The Future of Drug Safety:  A Proactive Contributor to  Better Patient Outcomes

    The Future of Drug Safety: A Proactive Contributor to Better Patient Outcomes

    At the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the role of drug safety attracted unprecedented mainstream attention. As new vaccines entered the market, and as a spectrum of different treatments was applied, the ability to quickly and efficiently capture accurate data, spot trends, draw robust conclusions about emerging safety issues, and act on them promptly became tangible - and expected by the public.
  • Regulatory Changes Affecting Pyrogen   Testing with the Monocyte Activation Test

    Regulatory Changes Affecting Pyrogen Testing with the Monocyte Activation Test

    Pyrogens represent a broad family of molecules that, when present in parenteral drugs, may induce adverse reactions in humans, ranging from fever to septic shock. This is why pyrogenicity testing became mandatory for injectable products, initially only with the Rabbit Pyrogen Test (RPT). However, the European Pharmacopoeia (Ph. Eur.) has now effectively banned the RPT and revised 57 monographs to remove the reference to it.
  • Comparison of Artificial Intelligence Generated Methods to Previously Published Accounts for the Same Problem

    Comparison of Artificial Intelligence Generated Methods to Previously Published Accounts for...

    The Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) created by Artificial Intelligence (AI) using Microsoft CoPilot Software were compared to the Procedures provided in Previously Published Manuscripts to determine if AI assisted and improved the Procedures.
  • Assessing the Empirical Role of Variables Influencing  Nitrosamine Reaction Dynamics:  A Pfizer Case Study Using Multivariate Analysis

    Assessing the Empirical Role of Variables Influencing Nitrosamine Reaction Dynamics: A Pfizer...

    Awareness of the potential presence of nitrosamine compounds in foods and drugs has continued to evolve. The publication of regulatory guidance has strengthened risk assessment and mitigation actions in pharmaceutical companies. This article presents a multivariate analysis case study supporting initial diagnostics on key factors suspected to influence reaction dynamics in the formation of nitrosamines.
  • Pyrimidine as an  Antidiabetic Derivative Targeting a-Amylase and  a-Glucosidase Inhibitors: A Mini-Review

    Pyrimidine as an Antidiabetic Derivative Targeting a-Amylase and a-Glucosidase Inhibitors:...

    The rise of scourges, several infectious diseases, and a variety of diseases necessitate the development of new pharmacological innovations using activated nitrogen-based compounds. All living things have the pyrimidine component, which has several important biological characteristics. This work outlines a straightforward, synthesized approach for creating heterocyclic components with several nitrogen-rich atoms acting as crucial components for creating new diabetic medications.
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