Wrapping of vials catches on at Nephron

Concerns over mis-dosing and product integrity have led a Florida drug maker from bulk-packed vials to individually wrapped vials for certain customers.

Line technician Omar Micheo loads a fresh roll of foil-based film to one of the six f/f/s machines that wrap Nephron's vials.
Line technician Omar Micheo loads a fresh roll of foil-based film to one of the six f/f/s machines that wrap Nephron's vials.

Nephron Pharmaceutical Corp. of Orlando, FL, uses blow/fill/seal technology to produce vials of liquid inhalation solution used in respiratory therapy. For years the firm has packed 30 or so vials in a laminated foil pouch that was then cartoned for shipment to markets nationwide.

Lately, however, Nephron finds more and more customers asking that each vial be packed individually in its own film. Satisfying this preference has led Nephron to invest in an automated system capable of handling a growing demand for this kind of packaging.

Why this shift toward individually wrapped vials? Partly because without such wrapping there is a chance for mis-dosing. Pharmacists or hospital personnel who open a bulk package dispense the required number of vials and put the rest back on the shelf, maybe in their carton or maybe not. If not, then the only remaining identification on each individual vial is the embossing along the side. The embossing, of course, is in very small characters because the vials themselves are small. That can lead to confusion, which in turn can lead to mis-dosing.

Also steering Nephron customers toward individually wrapped vials is the feeling that the contents of the vial are better protected if each vial is individually wrapped.

“The vials are made of low-density polyethylene,” says Nephron president Steve Simmons. “That means certain chemicals—sometimes found in paperboard or the inks used to print it—can migrate through the packaging material and into the product.”

For some Nephron customers, individually wrapped vials are unnecessary. The vials are used in such large numbers that once a bulk pack of 30 is opened, there’s no need to return unused vials to a storage shelf. Or the vials are used so quickly that there isn’t enough time for migration through LDPE to occur. But not all customers fit this description. Some have a distribution network or usage pattern that makes individually wrapped vials desireable. These customers are willing to pay an upcharge for the extra packaging.

“Individual wrapping of each vial does add a few cents to a vial,” says Simmons. “We pass it along. These are customers who are willing to pay a little more for packaging because it meets their particular needs.”

Automated system

The packaging line assembled by Nephron to produce individually wrapped vials consists of a blow/fill/seal system, a vibrating bowl, a leak detector, an orienter/cutter, six vertical form/fill/seal machines, a vial counter/cartoner, a checkweigher, and a laser coder.

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