| Pharmaceutical Packaging 2007 to 2011 Table of Contents
Section I:
Introduction
- Study purpose
- Pharmaceuticals defined
- Pharmaceutical packaging defined
- Study organization and methodology
- Methodology
- Organization
- Geographic regions
- Study deliverables
- Packaging manufacturers and converters
- Resin, additive, and component suppliers
- Equipment manufacturers
- Pharmaceutical producers, contract manufacturers and packagers
Section II:
Executive Summary
- Drivers and trends
- The human condition
- New drug requirements
- Over-the-counter (OTC) market
- Drug delivery methods
- Child resistance
- Anti-counterfeiting
- Tamper evidence
- Patient compliance
- Market projections
- Global market
Figure 1 – Global Pharmaceutical Packaging Consumption
- Geographic segmentation
Figure 2 – Pharmaceutical Packaging Consumption by Region
- OTC versus prescription
Figure 3 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by OTC vs. Prescription
- Child-resistant packaging
Figure 4 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Child Resistance
- Anti-counterfeit packaging
Figure 5 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Anti-counterfeit Features
- Patient compliance
Figure 6 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Patient Compliance
- Tamper evidence
Figure 7 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Tamper Evidence
- Package type
Figure 8 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Package Type
- Emerging technology
- Package
- Filling line technology
Section III:
Executive Summary
- Technology drivers and trends
- Drug safety and efficacy
- Drug sensitivity
- Drug delivery method
- Regulations – drug safety and efficacy
- Packaging cost
- Environment and health
- Packaging requirements
- Primary packaging
- Ampules
Figure 9 – Example Ampules
Table 1 – Global Ampule Suppliers
- Blister packs
Figure 10 – Blister Package
Table 2 – Global Blister Pack Web Suppliers
- Bottles
Figure 11 – Bottle Examples
Table 3 – Global Bottle Suppliers
- Canisters
Figure 12 – Canisters
Table 4 – Global Canister Suppliers
- Cartridges
Figure 13 – Cartridges
Table 5 – Global Cartridge Suppliers
- Intravenous (IV) bags
Figure 14 – Small and Large Volume IV Bags
Table 6 – Global IV Bag and Web Suppliers
- Mini-jars
Figure 15 – Mini-jars
Table 7 – Global Mini-jar Suppliers
- Pouches and strip packs
Figure 16 – Pharmaceutical Pouches
Figure 17 – Stick Pouch
Table 8 – Global Pouch and Pouch Web Suppliers
- Pre-fillable inhalers
Figure 18 – Pre-fillable Inhaler
Table 9 – Global Pre-fillable Inhaler Suppliers
- Pre-fillable syringes
Figure 19 – Pre-fillable Syringe
Table 10 – Global Pre-fillable Syringe Suppliers
- Tubes
Figure 20 - Tubes
Table 11 - Global Tube Suppliers
- Vials
Figure 21 – Vials
Table 12 – Global Vial Suppliers
- Other primary containers
- Innerseals
Table 13 – Global Innerseal Suppliers
- Closures
Table 14 – Global Closure Suppliers
- Secondary packaging
- Folding carton
- Blister cards and wallets
Figure 22 – Wallet
Table 15 – Global Secondary Packaging Suppliers
- Other
- Shrink bands and wraps
- Labels
- Compliance packaging
Figure 23 – Calendar Blister Pack
Figure 24 – Electronic Closures
Figure 25 – Electronic Blister Pack
- Child-resistant packaging
- Multi-dose packaging
Figure 26 – Child-resistant Closure Solutions
- Unit-dose packaging – non-recloseable
Figure 27 – Unit-dose Packaging - Non- Recloseable
- Additional child-resistant technologies
Figure 28 – Child-resistant Packaging
Figure 29– Child-resistant Packaging
Figure 30 – Child-resistant Packaging
- Tamper-evident packaging
- Unit-dose packaging
- Anti-counterfeit packaging
- Overt solutions
- Covert solutions
- Summary
- Labeling
Figure 31 – Target Corp. Bottle and Label
- Identification and tracking
- Bar codes
- Radio frequency identification (RFID)
- Active packaging
- Packaging processes for sterile drugs
- Traditional aseptic packaging
- Aseptic packaging with barrier isolation technology
- Terminal sterilization (in-package)
- Packaging processes for non-sterile drugs
- Pharmaceutical packaging materials
- Polymers
- Glass
- Aluminum foil
- Paper
- Paperboard
- Other
- Packaging structures
- Blister pack structures
- Bottles, vials, ampules, cartridges, and mini-jars
- Pouch structures
- Pre-filled syringes
- IV bags
- Tube structures
- Secondary packaging
- Other structures
- Pharmaceutical packaging equipment technology
- Filling equipment
Figure 32 – Ampule Filler
Figure 33 – Blow/Fill/Sealer
- Filling equipment suppliers
Table 16 – Filling Equipment Suppliers
Section IV:
Market Trends and Projections
- Healthcare industry
- Pharmaceutical industry drivers and trends
- Government policies
- Aging population
Figure 34 - Global Age Distribution
- Markets in developing nations
- New drugs and technology
- Biologics
- Generic drugs
- Pharmaceutical packaging drivers and trends
- Underlying product demand
- Regulatory environment
- Government programs
- Product differentiation
- Drug Safety
- Conversions from prescription to OTC
- Patient compliance
- Unit dose
- Alternative drug delivery methods
- Consumer habits/preferences
- Automation
- Environmental
- Drug protection requirements
- harmaceutical packaging segmented by delivery method
Figure 35 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Delivery Method
- Oral delivery
- Inhaled
- Parenteral
- Transdermal
- Cutaneous
- Ocular
- Nasal
- Other
- Forecast by drug delivery method
Table 17 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Drug Delivery Method
- Primary packaging segmented by package format
Figure 36 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Primary Package Type
- Ampules
- Blister packs
- Bottle
- Canisters for inhalers
- Catridges
- IV Bags
- Mini-jars
- Pouches and strip packs
- Pre-fillable inhalers
- Pre-fillable syringes
- Tubes
- Vials
- Other
- Closures
- Innerseals
- Projection summary
Table 18 – Primary Pharmaceutical Packaging
- Secondary packaging segmented by package type
Figure 37 – Secondary Pharmaceutical Packaging by Package Type
- Folding cartons
- Blister cards and wallets
- Other
- Labels
- Shrink bands and wraps
- Projection summary
Table 19 – Secondary Pharmaceutical Packaging
- Select package types segmented by packaging material
- Blister packs
Table 20 – Formed Web Segmented by Highest Barrier Material
- Tubes
Table 21 – Tubes Segmented by Highest Barrier Material
- Pouches and strip packs
Table 22 – Pouches Segmented by Barrier Material
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by packaging material
Figure 38 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Packaging Material
- Polymer
- Glass
- Aluminum foil
- Paper
- Paperboard
- Other
Table 23 – All Pharmaceutical Packaging Segmented by Material
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by geographic region
Figure 39 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Geographic Region
- Europe
- North America
- Japan
- Rest of World (ROW)
Table 24 – Primary Packaging Segmented by Geographic Region
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by regulatory status
Figure 40 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Regulatory Status
- Prescription
- OTC drugs
- Projection
Table 25 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Regulatory Status
- Packaging segmented by drug production process
Figure 41 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Drug Production Process
- Chemical
- Biological
- Projection
Table 26 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Drug Production Process
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by distribution channel
Figure 42 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Distribution Channel
- Retail
- Insitituional
Table 27 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Distribution Channel
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by compliance
Figure 43 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Compliance Features
- Electronic compliance
- Standard compliance
- Projection
Table 28 – Pharmaceutical Packaging Segmented by Compliance
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by anti-counterfeiting
Figure 44 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Anti-counterfeit Solutions
- Anti-counterfeit
Table 29 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Anti-counterfeit Solutions
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by child resistance
Figure 45 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Child-resistant Features
- Tamper evidence
- Projection
Table 31 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Tamper-evident Features
- Pharmaceutical packaging segmented by tamper evidence
Figure 46 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Tamper Evidence
- Tamper evidence
- Projection
Table 31 – Pharmaceutical Packaging by Tamper-evident Features
Section V:
Packaging Producers
Section VI:
Equipment Suppliers
Section VII:
Glossary
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