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Edible QR Code Can Be The Medicine Of The Future

By University of Copenhagen | February 5, 2018

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have developed a new method for the production of medicine. They print medical drugs in QR coded patterns onto an edible material. The production can be tailored to fit each patient and has the potential to protect against wrong medication and fake medicine according to the researchers. (Credit: Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen)

For the last 100 years, researchers have constantly pushed the boundaries for our knowledge about medicine and how different bodies can respond differently to it. However, the methods for the production of medicine have not yet moved itself away from mass production. Many who have a given illness get the same product with equal amount of an active compound.

This production might soon be in the past. In a new study, researchers from the University of Copenhagen together with colleagues from Åbo Akademi University in Finland have developed a new method for producing medicine. They produce a white edible material. Here, they print a QR code consisting of a medical drug. (See brief demo video.)

“This technology is promising, because the medical drug can be dosed exactly the way you want it to,” says Natalja Genina, an assistant professor of pharmacy. “This gives an opportunity to tailor the medication according to the patient getting it.”

Potential for Reducing Wrong or Fake Medicine

The shape of a QR code also enables storage of data in the “pill” itself.

“Simply doing a quick scan, you can get all the information about the pharmaceutical product. In that sense it can potentially reduce cases of wrong medication and fake medicine,” according to Genina.

The researchers hope that in the future a regular printer will be able to apply the medical drug in the pattern of a QR code, while the edible material will have to be produced in advance to allow on-demand production of medical drug near end-users.

“If we are successful with applying this production method to relatively simple printers, then it can enable the innovative production of personalized medicine and rethinking of the whole supply chain,” Jukka Rantanen, professor in the university pharmacy department, said.

The researchers are now working to refine the methods for medical production.

This research has been financed by the Independent Research Fund Denmark.

(Source: EurekAlert!)

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