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Connecting the Dots in the Medical Device Supply Chain

Medical device manufacturers can now benefit from a material packaging development courtesy of the cooperative efforts of the resin producer, extruder and thermoformer.

Medical device packaging made from Eastman's Eastalite resin.
Medical device packaging made from Eastman's Eastalite resin.

The typical supply chain follows a path from a medical device manufacturer (MDM) to a distributor to a hospital or medical facility and ultimately to the patient. But in this instance, let’s take a ride along the value chain that begins with a resin supplier that provides pellets to an extruder, which provides sheet made from that resin to a thermoformer, which then sells trays and rigid medical device packaging from that sheet to MDMs.

In this instance, Eastman’s Eastalite™ copolyester is used by Pacur, LLC for extrusion into a PETG foam sheet or rollstock that’s sold to custom thermoformers such as Plastic Ingenuity, Inc. for the manufacture of rigid medical device packages.

According to Eastman, Eastalite is a styrene-free alternative to high-impact polystyrene (HIPS) and other competing products. It is made without butadiene, bisphenol A, bisphenol S, ortho-phthalates or halogens such as chlorine or bromine. The material is compliant with select ISO 10993 requirements for medical device biocompatibility and applicable parts of ISO 11607.

Containers formed from Eastalite extruded sheet can be designed with deep undercuts and durable living hinges, and exhibit less stress whitening than packaging molded from other materials. Eastalite also provides tear strength while retaining color stability and functional integrity following sterilization by ethylene oxide (EtO) or gamma irradiation.

After a three-year journey from concept to product, packaging developed through the Eastman-Pacur-Plastic Ingenuity process is now in use commercially but as of press time, the MDM preferred not to divulge any specifics.

At November’s Pharma EXPO in Chicago, representatives from all three suppliers held an event to describe this medical device development. Below are excerpts from that discussion from Gary Stuart Hawkins, Global Technical Platform Leader, Medical & Packaging Applications Dev., Eastman, Jim Banko, Vice President of Sales for Pacur, and Jason Crosby, Medical Business Manager, Plastic Ingenuity.

Hawkins: When we started, Eastman had been working on our latest development, which at that time was our Tritan™ copolyester. We have a process called “Voice of the Customer” in which we ask MDMs and thermoformers what they need to serve their marketplace. Tritan was one of those products that we launched because of that feedback. But we also heard a lot about opaque materials and what people did and didn't like about them. One of the most frequently used opaque materials in medical device packaging is HIPS.

We wanted to make a product that was more stable for sterilization, more durable for sterile barrier protection, and much cleaner in terms of cutting, yet without using materials that were of concern. On top of all that it also is about 20 to 30% lighter than HIPS, so that allows you to make packages and make them thinner, use less materials, and therefore be more sustainable—all of which were all things we heard that we heard as marketplace needs.

We started making that product and worked closely with Pacur to understand more about how to extrude it properly. And we worked with Plastic Ingenuity to better understand how it thermoformed and what they needed. That's what brought about Eastalite, which was launched in 2014. We’re now we're at a point where the product is in the field and gaining some momentum and winning applications.

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