3D-Printed Medicines: A New Era for Indian Pharma
It is an additive manufacturing technique that aims to shift pharmaceutical manufacturing away from large-scale, uniform production and towards highly personalised, on-demand therapy. Source: Perplexity Imagine a scenario in a hospital pharmacy where drugs are no longer “one size fits all”. Instead, a patient receives a medicine customised to their age, weight, genetic profile, and current therapy. The medicine is built layer by layer so that it releases the drug at the right time and in the right amount for the patient. This example shows the potential of three-dimensional (3D) printing in pharmaceuticals. It is an additive manufacturing technique that aims to shift pharmaceutical manufacturing away from large-scale, uniform production and towards highly personalised, on-demand therapy. Understanding 3D printing of medicines The ISO (International Organisation for Standardisation) describes 3D printing of medicines as a process in which material is deposited layer by layer ...
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