University of Limerick
Browse

Progress on drug nanoparticle manufacturing: exploring the adaptability of batch bottom-up approaches to continuous manufacturing

Download (8.92 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-06-16, 11:16 authored by Clarinda Costa, Luis PadrelaLuis Padrela

Approximately 40 % of approved drugs and 90 % of small molecule drug candidates in development suffer from poor solubility, limiting their delivery and efficiency on site. Nanomanufacturing, particularly the production of drug nanoparticles and nanosuspensions, offers a solution by enhancing dissolution rates. However, traditional batch processes face challenges in particle size control, downstream processing, throughput, yield, and scalability. Continuous manufacturing (CM) presents a promising alternative, enabling the production of drug nanosystems in a streamlined, continuous scheme that reduces intermediate steps, footprint, and cost. CM also supports improved process control, real-time monitoring, and scalability through parallelization rather than traditional scale-up. This review examines recent advancements in adapting batch bottom-up technologies to continuous processes, focusing on the critical process parameters, critical material attributes and key quality attributes for nanoparticle production, integration of continuous methods, and the associated challenges of implementation in pharmaceutical manufacturing, including downstream processing, scale-up, and regulatory considerations

Funding

SSPC_Phase 2

Science Foundation Ireland

Find out more...

Next Generation Nanopharma Process Development Platform (NaPRO)

Science Foundation Ireland

Find out more...

Controlled Nucleation for the Continuous Crystallization of Nanopharmaceuticals

Science Foundation Ireland

Find out more...

History

Publication

Journal of Drug Delivery Science and Technology 111, 107120

Publisher

Elsevier

Also affiliated with

  • Synthesis and Solid State Pharmaceutical Centre
  • Bernal Institute

Department or School

  • Chemical Sciences

Usage metrics

    University of Limerick

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC